664 research outputs found
Extraordinary electron transmission through a periodic array of quantum dots
We study electron transmission through a periodic array of quantum dots (QD)
sandwiched between doped semiconductor leads. When the Fermi wavelength of
tunneling electron exceeds the array lattice constant, the off-resonant per QD
conductance is enhanced by several orders of magnitude relative to the
single-QD conductance. The physical mechanism of the enhancement is
delocalization of a small fraction of system eigenstates caused by coherent
coupling of QDs via the electron continuum in the leads.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Negative conductivity and anomalous screening in two-dimensional electron systems subjected to microwave radiation
A 2D electron system in a quantized magnetic field can be driven by microwave
radiation into a non-equilibrium state with strong magnetooscillations of the
dissipative conductivity. We demonstrate that in such system a negative
conductivity can coexist with a positive diffusion coefficient. In a finite
system, solution of coupled electrostatic and linear transport problems shows
that the diffusion can stabilize a state with negative conductivity.
Specifically, this happens when the system size is smaller than the absolute
value of the non-equilibrium screening length that diverges at the point where
the conductivity changes sign. We predict that a negative resistance can be
measured in such a state. Further, for a non-zero difference between the work
functions of two contacts, we explore the distribution of the electrostatic
potential and of the electron density in the sample. We show that in the
diffusion-stabilized regime of negative conductivity the system splits into two
regions with opposite directions of electric field. This effect is a precursor
of the domain structure that has been predicted to emerge spontaneously in the
microwave-induced zero-resistance states.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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