39 research outputs found
A Microwave Josephson Refrigerator
We present a microwave quantum refrigeration principle based on the Josephson
effect. When a superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) is pierced
by a time-dependent magnetic flux, it induces changes in the macroscopic
quantum phase and an effective finite bias voltage appears across the SQUID.
This voltage can be used to actively cool well below the lattice temperature
one of the superconducting electrodes forming the interferometer. The
achievable cooling performance combined with the simplicity and scalability
intrinsic to the structure pave the way to a number of applications in quantum
technology.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Parasitic effects in SQUID-based radiation comb generators
We study several parasitic effects on the implementation of a Josephson
radiation comb generator (JRCG) based on a dc superconducting quantum
interference device (SQUID) driven by an external magnetic field. This system
can be used as a radiation generator similarly to what is done in optics and
metrology, and allows one to generate up to several hundreds of harmonics of
the driving frequency. First we take into account how assuming a finite loop
geometrical inductance and junction capacitance in each SQUID may alter the
operation of this device. Then, we estimate the effect of imperfections in the
fabrication of an array of SQUIDs, which is an unavoidable source of errors in
practical situations. We show that the role of the junction capacitance is in
general negligible, whereas the geometrical inductance has a beneficial effect
on the performance of the device. The errors on the areas and junction
resistance asymmetries may deteriorate the performance, but their effect can be
limited up to a large extent with a suitable choice of fabrication parameters.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Gate-modulated thermopower in disordered nanowires: I. Low temperature coherent regime
Using a one-dimensional tight-binding Anderson model, we study a disordered
nanowire in the presence of an external gate which can be used for depleting
its carrier density (field effect transistor device configuration). In this
first paper, we consider the low temperature coherent regime where the electron
transmission through the nanowire remains elastic. In the limit where the
nanowire length exceeds the electron localization length, we derive three
analytical expressions for the typical value of the thermopower as a function
of the gate potential, in the cases where the electron transport takes place
(i) inside the impurity band of the nanowire, (ii) around its band edges and
eventually (iii) outside its band. We obtain a very large enhancement of the
typical thermopower at the band edges, while the sample to sample fluctuations
around the typical value exhibit a sharp crossover from a Lorentzian
distribution inside the impurity band towards a Gaussian distribution as the
band edges are approached.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, final version as publishe
Absorbing/Emitting Phonons with one dimensional MOSFETs
We consider nanowires in the field effect transistor device configuration.
Modeling each nanowire as a one dimensional lattice with random site
potentials, we study the heat exchanges between the nanowire electrons and the
substrate phonons, when electron transport is due to phonon-assisted hops
between localized states. Shifting the nanowire conduction band with a metallic
gate induces different behaviors. When the Fermi potential is located near the
band center, a bias voltage gives rise to small local heat exchanges which
fluctuate randomly along the nanowire. When it is located near one of the band
edges, the bias voltage yields heat currents which flow mainly from the
substrate towards the nanowire near one boundary of the nanowire, and in the
opposite direction near the other boundary. This opens interesting perspectives
for heat management at submicron scales: Arrays of parallel gated nanowires
could be used for a field control of phonon emission/absorption.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Thermoelectric efficiency of three-terminal quantum thermal machines
The efficiency of a thermal engine working in linear response regime in a
multi-terminals configuration is discussed. For the generic three-terminal
case, we provide a general definition of local and non-local transport
coefficients: electrical and thermal conductances, and thermoelectric powers.
Within the Onsager formalism, we derive analytical expressions for the
efficiency at maximum power, which can be written in terms of generalized
figures of merit. Also, using two examples, we investigate numerically how a
third terminal could improve the performance of a quantum system, and under
which conditions non-local thermoelectric effects can be observed.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures. Final versio
Separation of heat and charge currents for boosted thermoelectric conversion
In a multi-terminal device the (electronic) heat and charge currents can
follow different paths. In this paper we introduce and analyse a class of
multi-terminal devices where this property is pushed to its extreme limits,
with charge heat currents flowing in different reservoirs. After
introducing the main characteristics of such
regime we show how to realise it in a multi-terminal device with
normal and superconducting leads. We demonstrate that this regime allows to
control independently heat and charge flows and to greatly enhance
thermoelectric performances at low temperatures. We analyse in details a
three-terminal setup involving a superconducting lead, a normal lead and a
voltage probe. For a generic scattering region we show that in the regime of
heat-charge current separation both the power factor and the figure of merit
are highly increased with respect to a standard two-terminal system. These
results are confirmed for the specific case of a system consisting of three
coupled quantum dots.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Gate-modulated thermopower of disordered nanowires: II. Variable-range hopping regime
International audienceWe study the thermopower of a disordered nanowire in the field effect transistorconfiguration. After a first paper devoted to the elastic coherent regime (Bosisio R., Fleury G.and Pichard J.-L. 2014 New J. Phys. 16 035004), we consider here the inelastic activated regimetaking place at higher temperatures. In the case where charge transport is thermally assisted byphonons (Mott Variable Range Hopping regime), we use the Miller-Abrahams random resistornetwork model as recently adapted by Jiang et al. for thermoelectric transport. This approachpreviously used to study the bulk of the nanowire impurity band is extended for studying itsedges. In this limit, we show that the typical thermopower is largely enhanced, attaining valueslarger that 10 kB/e ∼ 1 mV K−1 and exhibiting a non-trivial behaviour as a function of thetemperature. A percolation theory by Zvyagin extended to disordered nanowires allows us toaccount for the main observed edge behaviours of the thermopower
Using Activated Transport in Parallel Nanowires for Energy Harvesting and Hot Spot Cooling
12 pages, 8 figures, 4 appendicesInternational audienceWe study arrays of parallel doped semiconductor nanowires in a temperature range where the electrons propagate through the nanowires by phonon assisted hops between localized states. By solving the Random Resistor Network problem, we compute the thermopower , the electrical conductance , and the electronic thermal conductance of the device. We investigate how those quantities depend on the position -- which can be tuned with a back gate -- of the nanowire impurity band with respect to the equilibrium electrochemical potential. We show that large power factors can be reached near the band edges, when self-averages to large values while is small but scales with the number of wires. Calculating the amount of heat exchanged locally between the electrons inside the nanowires and the phonons of the environment, we show that phonons are mainly absorbed near one electrode and emitted near the other when a charge current is driven through the nanowires near their band edges. This phenomenon could be exploited for a field control of the heat exchange between the phonons and the electrons at submicron scales in electronic circuits. It could be also used for cooling hot spots
Nanoscale phase-engineering of thermal transport with a Josephson heat modulator
Macroscopic quantum phase coherence has one of its pivotal expressions in the
Josephson effect [1], which manifests itself both in charge [2] and energy
transport [3-5]. The ability to master the amount of heat transferred through
two tunnel-coupled superconductors by tuning their phase difference is the core
of coherent caloritronics [4-6], and is expected to be a key tool in a number
of nanoscience fields, including solid state cooling [7], thermal isolation [8,
9], radiation detection [7], quantum information [10, 11] and thermal logic
[12]. Here we show the realization of the first balanced Josephson heat
modulator [13] designed to offer full control at the nanoscale over the
phase-coherent component of thermal currents. Our device provides
magnetic-flux-dependent temperature modulations up to 40 mK in amplitude with a
maximum of the flux-to-temperature transfer coefficient reaching 200 mK per
flux quantum at a bath temperature of 25 mK. Foremost, it demonstrates the
exact correspondence in the phase-engineering of charge and heat currents,
breaking ground for advanced caloritronic nanodevices such as thermal splitters
[14], heat pumps [15] and time-dependent electronic engines [16-19].Comment: 6+ pages, 4 color figure