134 research outputs found

    Triplet pairing due to spin-orbit-assisted electron-phonon coupling

    Get PDF
    We propose a microscopic mechanism for triplet pairing due to spin-orbit-assisted electron interaction with optical phonons in a crystal with a complex unit cell. Using two examples of electrons with symmetric Fermi surfaces in crystals with either a cubic or a layered square lattice, we show that spin-orbit-assisted electron-phonon coupling can, indeed, generate triplet pairing and that, in each case, it predetermines the tensor structure of a p-wave order parameter

    Semiclassical theory of a quantum pump

    Full text link
    In a quantum charge pump, the periodic variation of two parameters that affect the phase of the electronic wavefunction causes the flow of a direct current. The operating mechanism of a quantum pump is based on quantum interference, the phases of interfering amplitudes being modulated by the external parameters. In a ballistic quantum dot, there is a minimum time before which quantum interference can not occur: the Ehrenfest time. Here we calculate the current pumped through a ballistic quantum dot when the Ehrenfest time is comparable to the mean dwell time. Remarkably, we find that the pumped current has a component that is not suppressed if the Ehrenfest time is much larger than the mean dwell time.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Revised version, minor change

    Spectral features due to inter-Landau-level transitions in the Raman spectrum of bilayer graphene

    Get PDF
    We investigate the contribution of the low-energy electronic excitations towards the Raman spectrum of bilayer graphene for the incoming photon energy Omega >> 1eV. Starting with the four-band tight-binding model, we derive an effective scattering amplitude that can be incorporated into the commonly used two-band approximation. Due to the influence of the high-energy bands, this effective scattering amplitude is different from the contact interaction amplitude obtained within the two-band model alone. We then calculate the spectral density of the inelastic light scattering accompanied by the excitation of electron-hole pairs in bilayer graphene. In the absence of a magnetic field, due to the parabolic dispersion of the low-energy bands in a bilayer crystal, this contribution is constant and in doped structures has a threshold at twice the Fermi energy. In an external magnetic field, the dominant Raman-active modes are the n_{-} to n_{+} inter-Landau-level transitions with crossed polarisation of in/out photons. We estimate the quantum efficiency of a single n_{-} to n_{+} transition in the magnetic field of 10T as I_{n_{-} to n_{+}}~10^{-12}.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, expanded version published in PR

    Distribution of time-constants for tunneling through a 1D Disordered Chain

    Full text link
    The dynamics of electronic tunneling through a disordered 1D chain of finite length is considered. We calculate distributions of the transmission coefficient T, Wigner delay time and, Ď„Ď•\tau_\phi and the transport time, Ď„t=TĎ„Ď•\tau_t=T\tau_\phi. The central bodies of these distributions have a power-law form, what can be understood in terms of the resonant tunneling through localised states.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR

    Tunable Strongly Correlated Band Insulator

    Get PDF
    We introduce the notion of the strongly correlated band insulator (SCI), where the lowest energy excitations are collective modes (excitons) rather than the single particles. We construct controllable 1/N expansion for SCI to describe their observables properties. A remarkable example of the SCI is bilayer graphene which is shown to be tunable between the SCI and usual weak coupling regime.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Selective transmission of Dirac electrons and ballistic magnetoresistance of \textit{n-p} junctions in graphene

    Get PDF
    We show that an electrostatically created n-p junction separating the electron and hole gas regions in a graphene monolayer transmits only those quasiparticles that approach it almost perpendicularly to the n-p interface. Such a selective transmission of carriers by a single n-p junction would manifest itself in non-local magnetoresistance effect in arrays of such junctions and determines the unusual Fano factor in the current noise universal for the n-p junctions in graphene.Comment: 4 pages, 2 fig

    Quantum and classical surface acoustic wave induced magnetoresistance oscillations in a 2D electron gas

    Full text link
    We study theoretically the geometrical and temporal commensurability oscillations induced in the resistivity of 2D electrons in a perpendicular magnetic field by surface acoustic waves (SAWs). We show that there is a positive anisotropic dynamical classical contribution and an isotropic non-equilibrium quantum contribution to the resistivity. We describe how the commensurability oscillations modulate the resonances in the SAW-induced resistivity at multiples of the cyclotron frequency. We study the effects of both short-range and long-range disorder on the resistivity corrections for both the classical and quantum non-equilibrium cases. We predict that the quantum correction will give rise to zero-resistance states with associated geometrical commensurability oscillations at large SAW amplitude for sufficiently large inelastic scattering times. These zero resistance states are qualitatively similar to those observed under microwave illumination, and their nature depends crucially on whether the disorder is short- or long-range. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results for current and future experiments on two dimensional electron gases.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure

    Spontaneous symmetry breaking and Lifshitz transition in bilayer graphene

    Full text link
    We derive the renormalization group equations describing all the short-range interactions in bilayer graphene allowed by symmetry and the long range Coulomb interaction. For certain range of parameters, we predict the first order phase transition to the uniaxially deformed gapless state accompanied by the change of the topology of the electron spectrum.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Universal Conductance and Conductivity at Critical Points in Integer Quantum Hall Systems

    Full text link
    The sample averaged longitudinal two-terminal conductance and the respective Kubo-conductivity are calculated at quantum critical points in the integer quantum Hall regime. In the limit of large system size, both transport quantities are found to be the same within numerical uncertainty in the lowest Landau band, 0.60±0.02e2/h0.60\pm 0.02 e^2/h and 0.58±0.03e2/h0.58\pm 0.03 e^2/h, respectively. In the 2nd lowest Landau band, a critical conductance 0.61±0.03e2/h0.61\pm 0.03 e^2/h is obtained which indeed supports the notion of universality. However, these numbers are significantly at variance with the hitherto commonly believed value 1/2e2/h1/2 e^2/h. We argue that this difference is due to the multifractal structure of critical wavefunctions, a property that should generically show up in the conductance at quantum critical points.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Correlation-function spectroscopy of inelastic lifetime in heavily doped GaAs heterostructures

    Get PDF
    Measurements of resonant tunneling through a localized impurity state are used to probe fluctuations in the local density of states of heavily doped GaAs. The measured differential conductance is analyzed in terms of correlation functions with respect to voltage. A qualitative picture based on the scaling theory of Thouless is developed to relate the observed fluctuations to the statistics of single particle wavefunctions. In a quantitative theory correlation functions are calculated. By comparing the experimental and theoretical correlation functions the effective dimensionality of the emitter is analyzed and the dependence of the inelastic lifetime on energy is extracted.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figure
    • …
    corecore