421 research outputs found
Charge Frustration Effects in Capacitively Coupled Two-Dimensional Josephson-Junction Arrays
We investigate the quantum phase transitions in two capacitively coupled
two-dimensional Josephson-junction arrays with charge frustration. The system
is mapped onto the S=1 and anisotropic Heisenberg antiferromagnets near
the particle-hole symmetry line and near the maximal-frustration line,
respectively, which are in turn argued to be effectively described by a single
quantum phase model. Based on the resulting model, it is suggested that near
the maximal frustration line the system may undergo a quantum phase transition
from the charge-density wave to the super-solid phase, which displays both
diagonal and off- diagonal long-range order.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Electrical characterization of electroluminescent polymer nanoparticle composite devices
The current–voltage characteristics of light-emitting devices containing thin films of poly(dialkoxy-p-phenylene vinylene) (PPV) incorporated with silicon dioxide nanoparticles have been investigated. It is demonstrated that the current enhancement of the devices containing composite layers can be modeled by assuming that the effective thickness of the composite layers is about half of their actual thickness. Field-effect measurements reveal that the mobility of the charge carriers in PPV is not significantly changed by the incorporation of nanoparticles
Charge Transport in Voltage-Biased Superconducting Single-Electron Transistors
Charge is transported through superconducting SSS single-electron transistors
at finite bias voltages by a combination of coherent Cooper-pair tunneling and
quasiparticle tunneling. At low transport voltages the effect of an ``odd''
quasiparticle in the island leads to a -periodic dependence of the current
on the gate charge. We evaluate the characteristic in the framework of a
model which accounts for these effects as well as for the influence of the
electromagnetic environment. The good agreement between our model calculation
and experimental results demonstrates the importance of coherent Cooper-pair
tunneling and parity effects.Comment: RevTeX, 12 pages, 4 figure
Cotunneling Transport and Quantum Phase Transitions in Coupled Josephson-Junction Chains with Charge Frustration
We investigate the quantum phase transitions in two capacitively coupled
chains of ultra-small Josephson-junctions, with emphasis on the external charge
effects. The particle-hole symmetry of the system is broken by the gate voltage
applied to each superconducting island, and the resulting induced charge
introduces frustration to the system. Near the maximal-frustration line, where
the system is transformed into a spin-1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain,
cotunneling of the particles along the two chains is shown to play a major role
in the transport and to drive a quantum phase transition out of the
charge-density wave insulator, as the Josephson-coupling energy is increased.
We also argue briefly that slightly off the symmetry line, the universality
class of the transition remains the same as that right on the line, still being
driven by the particle-hole pairs.Comment: Final version accepted to Phys. Rev. Lett. (Longer version is
available from http://ctp.snu.ac.kr/~choims/
Indium phosphide photonic circuits on silicon electronics
The intimate integration of photonics and electronics in transceivers facilitates energy-efficiency, bandwidth acceleration and a route to radical miniaturization. We present and implement a wafer-to-wafer integration method which combines electronic and photonic foundry technologies
Current drag in capacitevly coupled Luttinger constrictions
We study the current drag in the system of two electrostatically coupled
finite 1D electron channels. We present the perturbation theory results along
with the results for two non-perturbative regimes. It is shown that the drag
may become absolute, that is, the currents in the channels are equal in a
finite window of the bias voltages.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 3 postscript figure
Geometric Quantum Computation on Solid-State Qubits
An adiabatic cyclic evolution of control parameters of a quantum system ends
up with a holonomic operation on the system, determined entirely by the
geometry in the parameter space. The operation is given either by a simple
phase factor (a Berry phase) or a non-Abelian unitary operator depending on the
degeneracy of the eigenspace of the Hamiltonian. Geometric quantum computation
is a scheme to use such holonomic operations rather than the conventional
dynamic operations to manipulate quantum states for quantum information
processing. Here we propose a geometric quantum computation scheme which can be
realized with current technology on nanoscale Josephson-junction networks,
known as a promising candidate for solid-state quantum computer.Comment: 6 figures; to appear in J. Phys.: Condens. Mat
Fidelity and leakage of Josephson qubits
The unit of quantum information is the qubit, a vector in a two-dimensional
Hilbert space. On the other hand, quantum hardware often operates in
two-dimensional subspaces of vector spaces of higher dimensionality. The
presence of higher quantum states may affect the accuracy of quantum
information processing. In this Letter we show how to cope with {\em quantum
leakage} in devices based on small Josephson junctions. While the presence of
higher charge states of the junction reduces the fidelity during gate
operations we demonstrate that errors can be minimized by appropriately
designing and operating the gates.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex, 2 eps figure
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