160 research outputs found
Electron spin manipulation and resonator readout in a double quantum dot nano-electromechanical system
Magnetically coupling a nano-mechanical resonator to a double quantum dot
confining two electrons can enable the manipulation of a single electron spin
and the readout of the resonator's natural frequency. When the Larmor frequency
matches the resonator frequency, the electron spin in one of the dots can be
selectively flipped by the magnetised resonator. By simultaneously measuring
the charge state of the two-electron double quantum dots, this transition can
be detected thus enabling the natural frequency of the mechanical resonator to
be determined.Comment: 7 pages, fixed typos, updated figures 4 and
Telegraph Noise in Coupled Quantum Dot Circuits Induced by a Quantum Point Contact
Charge detection utilizing a highly biased quantum point contact has become
the most effective probe for studying few electron quantum dot circuits.
Measurements on double and triple quantum dot circuits is performed to clarify
a back action role of charge sensing on the confined electrons. The quantum
point contact triggers inelastic transitions, which occur quite generally.
Under specific device and measurement conditions these transitions manifest
themselves as bounded regimes of telegraph noise within a stability diagram. A
nonequilibrium transition from artificial atomic to molecular behavior is
identified. Consequences for quantum information applications are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (as published
Spin-blockade spectroscopy of a two-level artificial molecule
Coulomb and spin blockade spectroscopy investigations have been performed on
an electrostatically defined ``artificial molecule'' connected to spin
polarized leads. The molecule is first effectively reduced to a two-level
system by placing both constituent atoms at a specific location of the level
spectrum. The spin sensitivity of the conductance enables us to identify the
electronic spin-states of the two-level molecule. We find in addition that the
magnetic field induces variations in the tunnel coupling between the two atoms.
The lateral nature of the device is evoked to explain this behavior.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; revised version with a minor change in Fig.2 and
additional inset in Fig.3.;accepted by PR
The influence of the long-lived quantum Hall potential on the characteristics of quantum devices
Novel hysteretic effects are reported in magneto-transport experiments on
lateral quantum devices. The effects are characterized by two vastly different
relaxation times (minutes and days). It is shown that the observed phenomena
are related to long-lived eddy currents. This is confirmed by torsion-balance
magnetometry measurements of the same 2-dimensional electron gas (2DEG)
material. These observations show that the induced quantum Hall potential at
the edges of the 2DEG reservoirs influences transport through the devices, and
have important consequences for the magneto-transport of all lateral quantum
devices.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Bipolar spin blockade and coherent state superpositions in a triple quantum dot
Spin qubits based on interacting spins in double quantum dots have been
successfully demonstrated. Readout of the qubit state involves a conversion of
spin to charge information, universally achieved by taking advantage of a spin
blockade phenomenon resulting from Pauli's exclusion principle. The archetypal
spin blockade transport signature in double quantum dots takes the form of a
rectified current. Currently more complex spin qubit circuits including triple
quantum dots are being developed. Here we show both experimentally and
theoretically (a) that in a linear triple quantum dot circuit, the spin
blockade becomes bipolar with current strongly suppressed in both bias
directions and (b) that a new quantum coherent mechanism becomes relevant.
Within this mechanism charge is transferred non-intuitively via coherent states
from one end of the linear triple dot circuit to the other without involving
the centre site. Our results have implications in future complex
nano-spintronic circuits.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Coulomb and Spin blockade of two few-electrons quantum dots in series in the co-tunneling regime
We present Coulomb Blockade measurements of two few-electron quantum dots in
series which are configured such that the electrochemical potential of one of
the two dots is aligned with spin-selective leads. The charge transfer through
the system requires co-tunneling through the second dot which is in
resonance with the leads. The observed amplitude modulation of the resulting
current is found to reflect spin blockade events occurring through either of
the two dots. We also confirm that charge redistribution events occurring in
the off-resonance dot are detected indirectly via changes in the
electrochemical potential of the aligned dot.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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