898 research outputs found
Quantum point contact due to Fermi-level pinning and doping profiles in semiconductor nanocolumns
We show that nanoscale doping profiles inside a nanocolumn in combination
with Fermi-level pinning at the surface give rise to the formation of a
saddle-point in the potential profile. Consequently, the lateral confinement
inside the channel varies along the transport direction, yielding an embedded
quantum point contact. An analytical estimation of the quantization energies
will be given
Ballistic Composite Fermions in Semiconductor Nanostructures
We report the results of two fundamental transport measurements at a Landau
level filling factor of 1/2. The well known ballistic electron transport
phenomena of quenching of the Hall effect in a mesoscopic cross-junction and
negative magnetoresistance of a constriction are observed close to B~=~0 and
. The experimental results demonstrate semi-classical charge
transport by composite fermions, which consist of electrons bound to an even
number of flux quanta.Comment: 9 pages TeX 3.1415 C version 6.1, 3 PostScript figure
Thermo-Electric Properties of Quantum Point Contacts
I. Introduction
II. Theoretical background (Landauer-Buttiker formalism of
thermo-electricity, Quantum point contacts as ideal electron waveguides,
Saddle-shaped potential)
III. Experiments (Thermopower, Thermal conductance, Peltier effect)
IV. ConclusionsComment: #4 of a series of 4 legacy reviews on QPC'
When the path is never shortest: a reality check on shortest path biocomputation
Shortest path problems are a touchstone for evaluating the computing
performance and functional range of novel computing substrates. Much has been
published in recent years regarding the use of biocomputers to solve minimal
path problems such as route optimisation and labyrinth navigation, but their
outputs are typically difficult to reproduce and somewhat abstract in nature,
suggesting that both experimental design and analysis in the field require
standardising. This chapter details laboratory experimental data which probe
the path finding process in two single-celled protistic model organisms,
Physarum polycephalum and Paramecium caudatum, comprising a shortest path
problem and labyrinth navigation, respectively. The results presented
illustrate several of the key difficulties that are encountered in categorising
biological behaviours in the language of computing, including biological
variability, non-halting operations and adverse reactions to experimental
stimuli. It is concluded that neither organism examined are able to efficiently
or reproducibly solve shortest path problems in the specific experimental
conditions that were tested. Data presented are contextualised with biological
theory and design principles for maximising the usefulness of experimental
biocomputer prototypes.Comment: To appear in: Adamatzky, A (Ed.) Shortest path solvers. From software
to wetware. Springer, 201
Boundary scattering and weak localization of electrons in a magnetic field
Wetensch. publicatieFaculteit der Wiskunde en Natuurwetenschappe
Anomalous Conductance Quantization in Carbon Nanotubes
Conductance measurements of carbon nanotubes containing gated local depletion
regions exhibit plateaus as a function of gate voltage, spaced by approximately
e2/h, the quantum of conductance for a single (non-degenerate) mode. Plateau
structure is investigated as a function of bias voltage, temperature, and
magnetic field. We speculate on the origin of this surprising quantization,
which appears to lack band and spin degeneracy.Comment: related articles at http://marcuslab.harvard.ed
Analysis of the temperature-dependent quantum point contact conductance in view of the metal-insulator transition in two dimensions
The temperature dependence of the conductance of a quantum point contact has
been measured. The conductance as a function of the Fermi energy shows
temperature-independent fixed points, located at roughly multiple integers of
. Around the first fixed point at e/h, the experimental data for
different temperatures can been scaled onto a single curve. For pure thermal
smearing of the conductance steps, a scaling parameter of one is expected. The
measured scaling parameter, however, is significantly larger than 1. The
deviations are interpreted as a signature of the potential landscape of the
quantum point contact, and of the source-drain bias voltage. We relate our
results phenomenologically to the metal-insulator transition in two dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Two-photon speckle as a probe of multi-dimensional entanglement
We calculate the statistical distribution P_2(I_2) of the speckle pattern
produced by a photon pair current I_2 transmitted through a random medium, and
compare with the single-photon speckle distribution P_1(I_1). We show that the
purity Tr rho^2 of a two-photon density matrix rho can be directly extracted
from the first two moments of P_1 and P_2. A one-to-one relationship is derived
between P_1 and P_2 if the photon pair is in an M-dimensional entangled pure
state. For M>>1 the single-photon speckle disappears, while the two-photon
speckle acquires an exponential distribution. The exponential distribution
transforms into a Gaussian if the quantum entanglement is degraded to a
classical correlation of M>>1 two-photon states. Two-photon speckle can
therefore discriminate between multi-dimensional quantum and classical
correlations.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Quantum transport and momentum conserving dephasing
We study numerically the influence of momentum-conserving dephasing on the
transport in a disordered chain of scatterers. Loss of phase memory is caused
by coupling the transport channels to dephasing reservoirs. In contrast to
previously used models, the dephasing reservoirs are linked to the transport
channels between the scatterers, and momentum conserving dephasing can be
investigated. Our setup provides a model for nanosystems exhibiting conductance
quantization at higher temperatures in spite of the presence of phononic
interaction. We are able to confirm numerically some theoretical predictions.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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