1,356 research outputs found

    Self-consistent equilibrium of a two-dimensional electron system with a reservoir in a quantizing magnetic field: Analytical approach

    Full text link
    An analytical approach has been developed to describe grand canonical equilibrium between a three dimensional (3D) electron system and a two dimensional (2D) one, an energy of which is determined self-consistently with an electron concentration. Main attention is paid to a Landau level (LL) pinning effect. Pinning means a fixation of the LL on a common Fermi level of the 2D and the 3D systems in a finite range of the magnetic field due to an electron transfer from the 2D to the 3D system. A condition and a start of LL pinning has been found for homogeneously broadened LLs. The electronic transfer from the 3D to the 2D system controls an extremely sharp magnetic dependency of an energy of the upper filled LL at integer filling of the LLs. This can cause a significant increase of inhomogeneous broadening of the upper LL that was observed in recent local probe experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, revtex

    Si/Ge hole-tunneling double-barrier resonant tunneling diodes formed on sputtered flat Ge layers

    No full text
    We have demonstrated Si/Ge hole-tunneling double-barrier resonant tunneling diodes (RTDs) formed on flat Ge layers with a relaxation rate of 89% by our proposed method; in this method, the flat Ge layers can be directly formed on highly B-doped Si(001) substrates using our proposed sputter epitaxy method. The RTDs exhibit clear negative differential resistance effects in the static current–voltage (I–V) curves at room temperature. The quantized energy level estimation suggests that resonance peaks that appeared in the I–V curves are attributed to hole tunneling through the first heavy- and light-hole energy levels

    Conductance of a quantum point contact based on spin-density-functional theory

    Full text link
    We present full quantum mechanical conductance calculations of a quantum point contact (QPC) performed in the framework of the density functional theory (DFT) in the local spin-density approximation (LDA). We show that a spin-degeneracy of the conductance channels is lifted and the total conductance exhibits a broad plateau-like feature at 0.5*2e^{2}/h. The lifting of the spin-degeneracy is a generic feature of all studied QPC structures (both very short and very long ones; with the lengths in the range 40<l<500 nm). The calculated conductance also shows a hysteresis for forward- and backward sweeps of the gate voltage. These features in the conductance can be traced to the formation of weakly coupled quasi-bound states (magnetic impurities) inside the QPC (also predicted in previous DFT-based studies). A comparison of obtained results with the experimental data shows however, that while the spin-DFT based "first-principle" calculations exhibits the spin polarization in the QPC, the calculated conductance clearly does not reproduce the 0.7 anomaly observed in almost all QPCs of various geometries. We critically examine major features of the standard DFT-based approach to the conductance calculations and argue that its inability to reproduce the 0.7 anomaly might be related to the infamous derivative discontinuity problem of the DFT leading to spurious self-interaction errors not corrected in the standard LDA. Our results indicate that the formation of the magnetic impurities in the QPC might be an artefact of the LDA when localization of charge is expected to occur. We thus argue that an accurate description of the QPC structure would require approaches that go beyond the standard DFT+LDA schemes.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
    • …
    corecore