1,328 research outputs found
Enhanced quantum tunnelling induced by disorder
We reconsider the problem of the enhancement of tunnelling of a quantum
particle induced by disorder of a one-dimensional tunnel barrier of length ,
using two different approximate analytic solutions of the invariant imbedding
equations of wave propagation for weak disorder. The two solutions are
complementary for the detailed understanding of important aspects of numerical
results on disorder-enhanced tunnelling obtained recently by Kim et al. (Phys.
rev. B{\bf 77}, 024203 (2008)). In particular, we derive analytically the
scaled wavenumber -threshold where disorder-enhanced tunnelling of an
incident electron first occurs, as well as the rate of variation of the
transmittance in the limit of vanishing disorder. Both quantities are in good
agreement with the numerical results of Kim et al. Our non-perturbative
solution of the invariant imbedding equations allows us to show that the
disorder enhances both the mean conductance and the mean resistance of the
barrier.Comment: 10 page
Flux Dependence of Persistent Current in a Mesoscopic Disordered Tight Binding Ring
We reconsider the study of persistent currents in a disordered
one-dimensional ring threaded by a magnetic flux, using he one-band
tight-binding model for a ring of N-sites with random site energies. The
secular equation for the eigenenergies expressed in terms of transfer matrices
in the site representation is solved exactly to second order in a perturbation
theory for weak disorder and fluxes differing from half-integer multiples of
the elementary flux quantum. From the equilibrium currents associated with the
one-electron eigenstates we derive closed analytic expressions for the disorder
averaged persistent current for even and odd numbers, Ne, of electrons in the
ground state. Explicit discussion for the half-filled band case confirms that
the persistent current is flux periodic as in the absence of disorder, and that
its amplitude is generally suppressed by the effect of the disorder. In
comparison to previous results, based on an approximate analysis of the secular
equation, the current suppression by disorder is strongly enhanced by a new
flux-dependent factor.Comment: 15 pages, LaTex 2
Conductance and localization in disordered wires: role of evanescent states
This paper extends an earlier analytical scattering matrix treatment of
conductance and localization in coupled two- and three Anderson chain systems
for weak disorder when evanescent states are present at the Fermi level. Such
states exist typically when the interchain coupling exceeds the width of
propagating energy bands associated with the various transverse eigenvalues of
the coupled tight-binding systems. We calculate reflection- and transmission
coefficients in cases where, besides propagating states, one or two evanescent
states are available at the Fermi level for elastic scattering of electrons by
the disordered systems. We observe important qualitative changes in these
coefficients and in the related localization lengths due to ineffectiveness of
the evanescent modes for transmission and reflection in the various scattering
channels. In particular, the localization lengths are generally significantly
larger than the values obtained when evanescent modes are absent. Effects
associated with disorder mediated coupling between propagating and evanescent
modes are shown to be suppressed by quantum interference effects, in lowest
order for weak disorder
Enhanced Transmission Through Disordered Potential Barrier
Effect of weak disorder on tunneling through a potential barrier is studied
analytically. A diagrammatic approach based on the specific behavior of
subbarrier wave functions is developed. The problem is shown to be equivalent
to that of tunneling through rectangular barriers with Gaussian distributed
heights. The distribution function for the transmission coefficient is
derived, and statistical moments \left are calculated. The
surprising result is that in average disorder increases both tunneling
conductance and resistance.Comment: 10 pages, REVTeX 3.0, 2 figures available upon reques
Exact transmission moments in one-dimensional weak localization and single-parameter scaling
We obtain for the first time the expressions for the mean and the variance of
the transmission coefficient for an Anderson chain in the weak localization
regime, using exact expansions of the complex transmission- and reflection
coefficients to fourth order in the weakly disordered site energies. These
results confirm the validity of single-parameter scaling theory in a domain
where the higher transmission cumulants may be neglected. We compare our
results with earlier results for transmission cumulants in the weak
localization domain based on the phase randomization hypothesis
Theory of Second and Higher Order Stochastic Processes
This paper presents a general approach to linear stochastic processes driven
by various random noises. Mathematically, such processes are described by
linear stochastic differential equations of arbitrary order (the simplest
non-trivial example is , where is not a Gaussian white
noise). The stochastic process is discretized into time-steps, all possible
realizations are summed up and the continuum limit is taken. This procedure
often yields closed form formulas for the joint probability distributions.
Completely worked out examples include all Gaussian random forces and a large
class of Markovian (non-Gaussian) forces. This approach is also useful for
deriving Fokker-Planck equations for the probability distribution functions.
This is worked out for Gaussian noises and for the Markovian dichotomous noise.Comment: 35 pages, PlainTex, accepted for publication in Phys Rev. E
Localization-delocalization transition in the quasi-one-dimensional ladder chain with correlated disorder
The generalization of the dimer model on a two-leg ladder is defined and
investigated both, analytically and numerically. For the closed system we
calculate the Landauer resistance analytically and found the presence of the
point of delocalization at the band center which is confirmed by the numerical
calculations of the Lyapunov exponent. We calculate also analytically the
localization length index and present the numerical investigations of the
density of states (DOS). For the open counterpart of this model the
distribution of the Wigner delay times is calculated numerically. It is shown
how the localization-delocalization transition manifest itself in the behavior
of the distribution.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, Revte
Localization length in Dorokhov's microscopic model of multichannel wires
We derive exact quantum expressions for the localization length for
weak disorder in two- and three chain tight-binding systems coupled by random
nearest-neighbour interchain hopping terms and including random energies of the
atomic sites. These quasi-1D systems are the two- and three channel versions of
Dorokhov's model of localization in a wire of periodically arranged atomic
chains. We find that for the considered systems with
, where is Thouless' quantum expression for the inverse
localization length in a single 1D Anderson chain, for weak disorder. The
inverse localization length is defined from the exponential decay of the
two-probe Landauer conductance, which is determined from an earlier transfer
matrix solution of the Schr\"{o}dinger equation in a Bloch basis. Our exact
expressions above differ qualitatively from Dorokhov's localization length
identified as the length scaling parameter in his scaling description of the
distribution of the participation ratio. For N=3 we also discuss the case where
the coupled chains are arranged on a strip rather than periodically on a tube.
From the transfer matrix treatment we also obtain reflection coefficients
matrices which allow us to find mean free paths and to discuss their relation
to localization lengths in the two- and three channel systems
Localization fom conductance in few-channel disordered wires
We study localization in two- and three channel quasi-1D systems using
multichain tight-binding Anderson models with nearest-neighbour interchain
hopping. In the three chain case we discuss both the case of free- and that of
periodic boundary conditions between the chains. The finite disordered wires
are connected to ideal leads and the localization length is defined from the
Landauer conductance in terms of the transmission coefficients matrix. The
transmission- and reflection amplitudes in properly defined quantum channels
are obtained from S-matrices constructed from transfer matrices in Bloch wave
bases for the various quasi-1D systems. Our exact analytic expressions for
localization lengths for weak disorder reduce to the Thouless expression for 1D
systems in the limit of vanishing interchain hopping. For weak interchain
hopping the localization length decreases with respect to the 1D value in all
three cases. In the three-channel cases it increases with interchain hopping
over restricted domains of large hopping
Cell permeable stapled peptide inhibitor of Wnt signaling that targets β-catenin protein‒protein interactions
The Wnt signaling pathway plays a critical role in cell proliferation and differentiation, thus it is often associated with diseases such as cancers. Unfortunately, although attractive, developing anti-cancer strategy targeting Wnt signaling has been challenging given that the most attractive targets are involved in protein-protein interactions (PPIs). Here, we develop a stapled peptide inhibitor that targets the interaction between β-catenin and T cell factor/lymphoid enhancer-binding factor transcription factors, which are crucially involved in Wnt signaling. Our integrative approach combines peptide stapling to optimize proteolytic stability, with lessons learned from cell-penetrating peptide (CPP) design to maximize cellular uptake resulting in NLS-StAx-h, a selective, cell permeable, stapled peptide inhibitor of oncogenic Wnt signaling that efficiently inhibits β-catenin-transcription factor interactions. We expect that this type of integrative strategy that endows stapled peptides with CPP features will be generally useful for developing inhibitors of intracellular PPIs
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