2,575 research outputs found

    Unconventional fermionic pairing states in a monochromatically tilted optical lattice

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    We study the one-dimensional attractive fermionic Hubbard model under the influence of periodic driving with the time-dependent density matrix renormalization group method. We show that the system can be driven into an unconventional pairing state characterized by a condensate made of Cooper pairs with a finite center-of-mass momentum similar to a Fulde-Ferrell state. We obtain results both in the laboratory and the rotating reference frames demonstrating that the momentum of the condensate can be finely tuned by changing the ratio between the amplitude and the frequency of the driving. In particular, by quenching this ratio to the value corresponding to suppression of the tunneling and the Coulomb interaction strength to zero, we are able to “freeze” the condensate. We finally study the effects of different initial conditions and compare our numerical results to those obtained from a time-independent Floquet theory in the large frequency regime. Our work offers the possibility of engineering and controlling unconventional pairing states in fermionic condensates.This work was conducted at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, sponsored by the Scientific User Facilities Division (SUFD), Basic Energy Sciences (BES), U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), under contract with UT-Battelle. A.N. acknowledges support by the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences and by the Early Career Research program, SUFD, BES, DOE. A.E.F. acknowledges the DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, for support under Grant No. DE-SC0014407. A.P. was supported by NSF DMR-1506340, ARO W911NF1410540, and AFOSR FA9550-16-1-0334. (Scientific User Facilities Division (SUFD); Basic Energy Sciences (BES); U.S. Department of Energy (DOE); UT-Battelle; Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences; Early Career Research program; SUFD; BES; DOE; DE-SC0014407 - DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences; NSF DMR-1506340; ARO W911NF1410540; AFOSR FA9550-16-1-0334)Published versio

    Single-parameter adiabatic charge pumping in carbon nanotube resonators

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    Single-parameter adiabatic charge pumping, induced by a nearby radio-frequency antenna, is achieved in suspended carbon nanotubes close to the mechanical resonance. The charge pumping is due to an important dynamic adjustment of the oscillating motion to the antenna signal and it is different from the mechanism active in the two-parameter pumping. Finally, the second harmonic oscillator response shows an interesting relationship with the first harmonic that should be experimentally observed

    Stochastic dynamics for a single vibrational mode in molecular junctions

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    We propose a very accurate computational scheme for the dynamics of a classical oscillator coupled to a molecular junction driven by a finite bias, including the finite mass effect. We focus on two minimal models for the molecular junction: Anderson-Holstein (AH) and two-site Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) models. As concerns the oscillator dynamics, we are able to recover a Langevin equation confirming what found by other authors with different approaches and assessing that quantum effects come from the electronic subsystem only. Solving numerically the stochastic equation, we study the position and velocity distribution probabilities of the oscillator and the electronic transport properties at arbitrary values of electron-oscillator interaction, gate and bias voltages. The range of validity of the adiabatic approximation is established in a systematic way by analyzing the behaviour of the kinetic energy of the oscillator. Due to the dynamical fluctuations, at intermediate bias voltages, the velocity distributions deviate from a gaussian shape and the average kinetic energy shows a non monotonic behaviour. In this same regime of parameters, the dynamical effects favour the conduction far from electronic resonances where small currents are observed in the infinite mass approximation. These effects are enhanced in the two-site SSH model due to the presence of the intermolecular hopping t. Remarkably, for sufficiently large hopping with respect to tunneling on the molecule, small interaction strengths and at intermediate bias (non gaussian regime), we point out a correspondence between the minima of the kinetic energy and the maxima of the dynamical conductance.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Physical Review

    Probing nonlinear mechanical effects through electronic currents: the case of a nanomechanical resonator acting as electronic transistor

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    We study a general model describing a self-detecting single electron transistor realized by a suspended carbon nanotube actuated by a nearby antenna. The main features of the device, recently observed in a number of experiments, are accurately reproduced. When the device is in a low current-carrying state, a peak in the current signals a mechanical resonance. On the contrary, a dip in the current is found in high current-carrying states. In the nonlinear vibration regime of the resonator, we are able to reproduce quantitatively the characteristic asymmetric shape of the current-frequency curves. We show that the nonlinear effects coming out at high values of the antenna amplitude are related to the effective nonlinear force induced by the electronic flow. The interplay between electronic and mechanical degrees of freedom is understood in terms of an unifying model including in an intrinsic way the nonlinear effects driven by the external probe.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review

    Interplay of charge, spin and lattice degrees of freedom on the spectral properties of the one-dimensional Hubbard-Holstein model

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    We calculate the spectral function of the one dimensional Hubbard-Holstein model using the time dependent Density Matrix Renormalization Group (tDMRG), focusing on the regime of large local Coulomb repulsion, and away from electronic half-filling. We argue that, from weak to intermediate electron-phonon coupling, phonons interact only with the electronic charge, and not with the spin degrees of freedom. For strong electron-phonon interaction, spinon and holon bands are not discernible anymore and the system is well described by a spinless polaronic liquid. In this regime, we observe multiple peaks in the spectrum with an energy separation corresponding to the energy of the lattice vibrations (i.e., phonons). We support the numerical results by introducing a well controlled analytical approach based on Ogata-Shiba's factorized wave-function, showing that the spectrum can be understood as a convolution of three contributions, originating from charge, spin, and lattice sectors. We recognize and interpret these signatures in the spectral properties and discuss the experimental implications.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Noise-assisted Thouless pump in elastically deformable molecular junctions

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    We study a Thouless pump realized with an elastically \textit{deformable quantum dot} whose center of mass follows a non-linear stochastic dynamics. The interplay of noise, non-linear effects, dissipation and interaction with an external time-dependent driving on the pumped charge is fully analyzed. The results show that the quantum pumping mechanism not only is not destroyed by the force fluctuations, but it becomes stronger when the forcing signal frequency is tuned close to the resonance of the vibrational mode. The robustness of the quantum pump with temperature is also investigated and an exponential decay of the pumped charge is found when the coupling to the vibrational mode is present. Implications of our results for nano-electromechanical systems are also discussed.Comment: 2 Appendices and figures adde
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