451 research outputs found
Coherent Electron-Phonon Coupling in Tailored Quantum Systems
The coupling between a two-level system and its environment leads to
decoherence. Within the context of coherent manipulation of electronic or
quasiparticle states in nanostructures, it is crucial to understand the sources
of decoherence. Here, we study the effect of electron-phonon coupling in a
graphene and an InAs nanowire double quantum dot. Our measurements reveal
oscillations of the double quantum dot current periodic in energy detuning
between the two levels. These periodic peaks are more pronounced in the
nanowire than in graphene, and disappear when the temperature is increased. We
attribute the oscillations to an interference effect between two alternative
inelastic decay paths involving acoustic phonons present in these materials.
This interpretation predicts the oscillations to wash out when temperature is
increased, as observed experimentally.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Graphene Rings in Magnetic Fields: Aharonov-Bohm Effect and Valley Splitting
We study the conductance of mesoscopic graphene rings in the presence of a
perpendicular magnetic field by means of numerical calculations based on a
tight-binding model. First, we consider the magnetoconductance of such rings
and observe the Aharonov-Bohm effect. We investigate different regimes of the
magnetic flux up to the quantum Hall regime, where the Aharonov-Bohm
oscillations are suppressed. Results for both clean (ballistic) and disordered
(diffusive) rings are presented. Second, we study rings with smooth mass
boundary that are weakly coupled to leads. We show that the valley degeneracy
of the eigenstates in closed graphene rings can be lifted by a small magnetic
flux, and that this lifting can be observed in the transport properties of the
system.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Gate-defined graphene double quantum dot and excited state spectroscopy
A double quantum dot is formed in a graphene nanoribbon device using three
top gates. These gates independently change the number of electrons on each dot
and tune the inter-dot coupling. Transport through excited states is observed
in the weakly coupled double dot regime. We extract from the measurements all
relevant capacitances of the double dot system, as well as the quantized level
spacing
A semi-parametric approach to estimate risk functions associated with multi-dimensional exposure profiles: application to smoking and lung cancer
A common characteristic of environmental epidemiology is the multi-dimensional aspect of exposure patterns, frequently reduced to a cumulative exposure for simplicity of analysis. By adopting a flexible Bayesian clustering approach, we explore the risk function linking exposure history to disease. This approach is applied here to study the relationship between different smoking characteristics and lung cancer in the framework of a population based case control study
Dirac electrons in graphene-based quantum wires and quantum dots
In this paper we analyse the electronic properties of Dirac electrons in
finite-size ribbons and in circular and hexagonal quantum dots made of
graphene.Comment: Contribution for J. Phys.: Cond. Mat. special issue on graphene
physic
Patterning graphene nanostripes in substrate-supported functionalized graphene: A promising route to integrated, robust, and superior transistors
It is promising to apply quantum-mechanically confined graphene systems in
field-effect transistors. High stability, superior performance, and large-scale
integration are the main challenges facing the practical application of
graphene transistors. Our understandings of the adatom-graphene interaction
combined with recent progress in the nanofabrication technology indicate that
very stable and high-quality graphene nanostripes could be integrated in
substrate-supported functionalized (hydrogenated or fluorinated) graphene using
electron-beam lithography. We also propose that parallelizing a couple of
graphene nanostripes in a transistor should be preferred for practical
application, which is also very useful for transistors based on graphene
nanoribbon.Comment: Frontiers of Physics (2012) to be publishe
Quantum dots and spin qubits in graphene
This is a review on graphene quantum dots and their use as a host for spin
qubits. We discuss the advantages but also the challenges to use graphene
quantum dots for spin qubits as compared to the more standard materials like
GaAs. We start with an overview of this young and fascinating field and will
then discuss gate-tunable quantum dots in detail. We calculate the bound states
for three different quantum dot architectures where a bulk gap allows for
confinement via electrostatic fields: (i) graphene nanoribbons with armchair
boundary, (ii) a disc in single-layer graphene, and (iii) a disc in bilayer
graphene. In order for graphene quantum dots to be useful in the context of
spin qubits, one needs to find reliable ways to break the valley-degeneracy.
This is achieved here, either by a specific termination of graphene in (i) or
in (ii) and (iii) by a magnetic field, without the need of a specific boundary.
We further discuss how to manipulate spin in these quantum dots and explain the
mechanism of spin decoherence and relaxation caused by spin-orbit interaction
in combination with electron-phonon coupling, and by hyperfine interaction with
the nuclear spin system.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, topical review prepared for Nanotechnolog
Compilation of results of the ICPPR non-Apis working group with a special focus on the bumblebee acute oral and contact toxicity ring test 2014 ICPPR Non-Apis Working Group
Although honeybee risk assessment for chemicals has been rigorously revised recently, methods and techniques available for non-apis pollinators are scarce. An ICPPR working group ânon-apisâ was established in 2013 to address these knowledge gaps. Acute contact tests were designed and performed with solitary bees Osmia sp. but still require further optimization. Ring tests on acute oral and contact toxicity for the bumblebee Bombus sp. were developed and performed in 2014. Thirteen European laboratories participated in the trials and in most cases control mortality was < 10% after 96h, indicating that the developed methodologies were feasible in a variety of laboratories. The oral exposure and the group contact exposure tests were each found to generate more variable LD50 estimates, whereas the endpoints obtained in the single contact tests were more consistent among laboratories. The difference in the two different contact test designs indicates the presence of a âhousingâ effect, which makes the group housing less favorable. In addition, the use of Tween80 as a wetting agent was found to be unsuccessful
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