1,713 research outputs found
Thermoelectric study of dissipative quantum dot heat engines
This paper examines the thermoelectric response of a dissipative quantum dot
heat engine based on the Anderson-Holstein model in two relevant operating
limits: (i) when the dot phonon modes are out of equilibrium, and (ii) when the
dot phonon modes are strongly coupled to a heat bath. In the first case, a
detailed analysis of the physics related to the interplay between the quantum
dot level quantization, the on-site Coulomb interaction and the electron-phonon
coupling on the thermoelectric performance reveals that an n-type heat engine
performs better than a p-type heat engine. In the second case, with the aid of
the dot temperature estimated by incorporating a {\it{thermometer bath}}, it is
shown that the dot temperature deviates from the bath temperature as
electron-phonon interaction becomes stronger. Consequently, it is demonstrated
that the dot temperature controls the direction of phonon heat currents,
thereby influencing the thermoelectric performance. Finally, the conditions on
the maximum efficiency with varying phonon couplings between the dot and all
the other macroscopic bodies are analyzed in order to reveal the nature of the
optimum junction.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, To be published in Phys Rev.
Collisionless Transport Close to a Fermionic Quantum Critical Point in Dirac Materials
Quantum transport close to a critical point is a fundamental, but enigmatic
problem due to fluctuations, persisting at all length scales. We report the
scaling of optical conductivity (OC) in the \emph{collisionless} regime () in the vicinity of a relativistic quantum critical point,
separating two-dimensional () massless Dirac fermions from a fully gapped
insulator or superconductor. Close to such critical point gapless fermionic and
bosonic excitations are strongly coupled, leading to a \emph{universal}
suppression of the inter-band OC as well as of the Drude peak (while
maintaining its delta function profile) inside the critical regime, which we
compute to the leading order in - and -expansions, where
counts fermion flavor number and . Correction to the OC at such a
non-Gaussian critical point due to the long-range Coulomb interaction and
generalizations of these scenarios to a strongly interacting three-dimensional
Dirac or Weyl liquid are also presented, which can be tested numerically and
possibly from non-pertubative gauge-gravity duality, for example.Comment: Published version in PRL: 5+epsilon Pages, 2 Figures (Supplementary
Materials as Ancillary file: 4 pages
Unifying Interacting Nodal Semimetals: A New Route to Strong Coupling
We propose a general framework for constructing a large set of nodal-point
semimetals by tuning the number of linearly () and (at most) quadratically
() dispersing directions. By virtue of such a unifying scheme, we identify
a new perturbative route to access various strongly interacting non-Dirac
semimetals with . As a demonstrative example, we relate a two
dimensional anisotropic semimetal with , describing the topological
transition between a Dirac semimetal and a normal insulator, and its three
dimensional counterparts with , . We address the quantum critical
phenomena and emergence of non-Fermi liquid states with unusual dynamical
structures within the framework of an expansion, where
, when these systems reside at the brink of charge- or
spin-density-wave orderings, or an -wave pairing. Our results can be germane
to two-dimensional uniaxially strained optical honeymcomb lattice,
-(BEDT-TTF).Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; Published versio
Unconventional superconductivity in nearly flat bands in twisted bilayer graphene
Flat electronic bands can accommodate a plethora of interaction driven
quantum phases, since kinetic energy is quenched therein and electronic
interactions therefore prevail. Twisted bilayer graphene, near so-called the
"magic angles", features \emph{slow} Dirac fermions close to the
charge-neutrality point that persist up to high-energies. Starting from a
continuum model of slow, but strongly interacting Dirac fermions, we show that
with increasing chemical doping away from the charge-neutrality point, a
time-reversal symmetry breaking, valley pseudo-spin-triplet, topological
superconductor gradually sets in, when the system resides at the brink of an
anti-ferromagnetic ordering (due to Hubbard repulsion), in qualitative
agreement with recent experimental findings. The paired state exhibits
quantized spin and thermal Hall conductivities, polar Kerr and Faraday
rotations. Our conclusions should also be applicable for other correlated
two-dimensional Dirac materials.Comment: 5 Pages, 2 Figures: Published Version in PRB (Supplementary
Materials: 4 Pages, Ancillary file
- …