650 research outputs found

    Topological energy gaps in the [111]-oriented InAs/GaSb and GaSb/InAs core-shell nanowires

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    The [111]-oriented InAs/GaSb and GaSb/InAs core-shell nanowires have been studied by the 8×88\times 8 Luttinger-Kohn k⃗⋅p⃗\vec{k}\cdot\vec{p} Hamiltonian to search for non-vanishing fundamental gaps between inverted electron and hole bands. We focus on the variations of the topologically nontrivial fundamental gap, the hybridization gap, and the effective gap with the core radius and shell thickness of the nanowires. The evolutions of all the energy gaps with the structural parameters are shown to be dominantly governed by quantum size effects. With a fixed core radius, a topologically nontrivial fundamental gap exists only at intermediate shell thicknesses. The maximum gap is ∼4.4\sim 4.4 meV for GaSb/InAs and ∼3.5\sim 3.5 meV for InAs/GaSb core-shell nanowires, and for the GaSb/InAs core-shell nanowires the gap persists over a wider range of geometrical parameters. The intrinsic reason for these differences between the two types of nanowires is that in the shell the electron-like states of InAs is more delocalized than the hole-like state of GaSb, while in the core the hole-like state of GaSb is more delocalized than the electron-like state of InAs, and both features favor stronger electron-hole hybridization. Since similar features of the electron- and hole-like states have been found in nanowires of other materials, it could serve as a common rule to put the hole-like state in the core while the electron-like state in the shell of a core-shell nanowire to achieve better topological properties.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure

    Anisotropic Pauli spin-blockade effect and spin-orbit interaction field in an InAs nanowire double quantum dot

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    We report on experimental detection of the spin-orbit interaction field in an InAs nanowire double quantum dot device. In the spin blockade regime, leakage current through the double quantum dot is measured and is used to extract the effects of spin-orbit interaction and hyperfine interaction on spin state mixing. At finite magnetic fields, the leakage current arising from the hyperfine interaction is suppressed and the spin-orbit interaction dominates spin state mixing. We observe dependence of the leakage current on the applied magnetic field direction and determine the direction of the spin-orbit interaction field. We show that the spin-orbit field lies in a direction perpendicular to the nanowire axis but with a pronounced off-substrate-plane angle. It is for the first time that such an off-substrate-plane spin-orbit field in an InAs nanowire has been detected. The results are expected to have an important implication in employing InAs nanowires to construct spin-orbit qubits and topological quantum devices.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, Supporting Informatio

    Nonequilibrium dynamics of the localization-delocalization transition in the non-Hermitian Aubry-Andr\'{e} model

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    In this paper, we investigate the driven dynamics of the localization transition in the non-Hermitian Aubry-Andr\'{e} model with the periodic boundary condition. Depending on the strength of the quasi-periodic potential λ\lambda, this model undergoes a localization-delocalization phase transition. We find that the localization length ξ\xi satisfies ξ∼ε−ν\xi\sim \varepsilon^{-\nu} with ε\varepsilon being the distance from the critical point and ν=1\nu=1 being a universal critical exponent independent of the non-Hermitian parameter. In addition, from the finite-size scaling of the energy gap between the ground state and the first excited state, we determine the dynamic exponent zz as z=2z=2. The critical exponent of the inverse participation ratio (IPR) for the nnth eigenstate is also determined as s=0.1197s=0.1197. By changing ε\varepsilon linearly to cross the critical point, we find that the driven dynamics can be described by the Kibble-Zurek scaling (KZS). Moreover, we show that the KZS with the same set of the exponents can be generalized to the localization phase transitions in the excited states
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