3,671 research outputs found
DNA double helices for single molecule electronics
The combination of self-assembly and electronic properties as well as its
true nanoscale dimensions make DNA a promising candidate for a building block
of single molecule electronics. We argue that the intrinsic double helix
conformation of the DNA strands provides a possibility to drive the electric
current through the DNA by the perpendicular electric (gating) field. The
transistor effect in the poly(G)-poly(C) synthetic DNA is demonstrated within a
simple model approach. We put forward experimental setups to observe the
predicted effect and discuss possible device applications of DNA. In
particular, we propose a design of the single molecule analog of the Esaki
diode.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figur
Spin-dependent pump current and noise in an adiabatic quantum pump based on domain walls in a magnetic nanowire
We study the pump current and noise properties in an adiabatically modulated
magnetic nanowire with double domain walls (DW). The modulation is brought
about by applying a slowly oscillating magnetic and electric fields with a
controllable phase difference. The pumping mechanism resembles the case of the
quantum dot pump with two-oscillating gates. The pump current, shot noise, and
heat flow show peaks when the Fermi energy matches with the spin-split resonant
levels localized between the DWs. The peak height of the pump current is an
indicator for the lifetime of the spin-split quasistationary states between the
DWs. For sharp DWs, the energy absorption from the oscillating fields results
in side-band formations observable in the pump current. The pump noise carries
information on the correlation properties between the nonequilibrium electrons
and the quasi-holes created by the oscillating scatterer. The ratio between the
pump shot noise and the heat flow serves as an indicator for quasi-particle
correlation.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Noise properties of two single electron transistors coupled by a nanomechanical resonator
We analyze the noise properties of two single electron transistors (SETs)
coupled via a shared voltage gate consisting of a nanomechanical resonator.
Working in the regime where the resonator can be treated as a classical system,
we find that the SETs act on the resonator like two independent heat baths. The
coupling to the resonator generates positive correlations in the currents
flowing through each of the SETs as well as between the two currents. In the
regime where the dynamics of the resonator is dominated by the back-action of
the SETs, these positive correlations can lead to parametrically large
enhancements of the low frequency current noise. These noise properties can be
understood in terms of the effects on the SET currents of fluctuations in the
state of a resonator in thermal equilibrium which persist for times of order
the resonator damping time.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Magnetoconductance of the quantum spin Hall state
We study numerically the edge magnetoconductance of a quantum spin Hall
insulator in the presence of quenched nonmagnetic disorder. For a finite
magnetic field B and disorder strength W on the order of the bulk gap E_g, the
conductance deviates from its quantized value in a manner which appears to be
linear in |B| at small B. The observed behavior is in qualitative agreement
with the cusp-like features observed in recent magnetotransport measurements on
HgTe quantum wells. We propose a dimensional crossover scenario as a function
of W, in which for weak disorder W < E_g the edge liquid is analogous to a
disordered spinless 1D quantum wire, while for strong disorder W > E_g, the
disorder causes frequent virtual transitions to the 2D bulk, where the
originally 1D edge electrons can undergo 2D diffusive motion and 2D
antilocalization.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Anomalous Josephson Current in Junctions with Spin-Polarizing Quantum Point Contacts
We consider a ballistic Josephson junction with a quantum point contact in a
two-dimensional electron gas with Rashba spin-orbit coupling. The point contact
acts as a spin filter when embedded in a circuit with normal electrodes. We
show that with an in-plane external magnetic field an anomalous supercurrent
appears even for zero phase difference between the superconducting electrodes.
In addition, the external field induces large critical current asymmetries
between the two flow directions, leading to supercurrent rectifying effects.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in PR
Scattering of Dirac electrons by circular mass barriers: valley filter and resonant scattering
The scattering of two-dimensional (2D) massless Dirac electrons is
investigated in the presence of a random array of circular mass barriers. The
inverse momentum relaxation time and the Hall factor are calculated and used to
obtain parallel and perpendicular resistivity components within linear
transport theory. We found a non zero perpendicular resistivity component which
has opposite sign for electrons in the different K and K' valleys. This
property can be used for valley filter purposes. The total cross-section for
scattering on penetrable barriers exhibit resonances due to the presence of
quasi-bound states in the barriers that show up as sharp gaps in the
cross-section while for Schr\"{o}dinger electrons they appear as peaks.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
Non-adiabatic Current Excitation in Quantum Rings
We investigate the difference in the response of a one-dimensional
semiconductor quantum ring and a finite-width ring to a strong and short-lived
time-dependent perturbation in the THz regime. In both cases the persistent
current is modified through a nonadiabatic change of the many-electron states
of the system, but by different mechanisms in each case.Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages with 6 embedded postscript figures, submitted to 20th
Nordic Semiconductor Meeting, Tampere (2003
Coherent transport through graphene nanoribbons in the presence of edge disorder
We simulate electron transport through graphene nanoribbons of experimentally
realizable size (length L up to 2 micrometer, width W approximately 40 nm) in
the presence of scattering at rough edges. Our numerical approach is based on a
modular recursive Green's function technique that features sub-linear scaling
with L of the computational effort. We identify the influence of the broken A-B
sublattice (or chiral) symmetry and of K-K' scattering by Fourier spectroscopy
of individual scattering states. For long ribbons we find Anderson-localized
scattering states with a well-defined exponential decay over 10 orders of
magnitude in amplitude.Comment: 8 pages, 6 Figure
In-situ measurements of total reactive nitrogen, total water vapor, and aerosols in polar stratospheric clouds in the Antarctic stratosphere
Measurements of total reactive nitrogen, NOy, total water vapor, and aerosols were made as part of the Airborne Antarctic Ozone Experiment. The measurements were made using instruments located onboard the NASA ER-2 aircrafts which conducted twelve flights over the Antarctic continent reaching altitudes of 18 km at 72 S latitude. Each instrument utilized an ambient air sample and provided a measurement up to 1 Hz or every 200 m of flight path. The data presented focus on the flights of Aug. 17th and 18th during which Polar Stratospheric Clouds (PSCs) were encountered containing concentrations of 0.5 to 1.0 micron diameter aerosols greater than 1 cm/cu. The temperature pressure during these events ranged as low as 184 K near 75 mb pressure, with water values near 3.5 ppm by volume (ppmv). With the exception of two short periods, the PSC activity was observed at temperatures above the frost point of water over ice. The data gathered during these flights are analyzed and presented
Improvement of current-control induced by oxide crenel in very short field-effect-transistor
A 2D quantum ballistic transport model based on the non-equilibrium Green's
function formalism has been used to theoretically investigate the effects
induced by an oxide crenel in a very short (7 nm) thin-film
metal-oxide-semiconductor-field-effect-transistor. Our investigation shows that
a well adjusted crenel permits an improvement of on-off current ratio Ion/Ioff
of about 244% with no detrimental change in the drive current Ion. This
remarkable result is explained by a nontrivial influence of crenel on
conduction band-structure in thin-film. Therefore a well optimized crenel seems
to be a good solution to have a much better control of short channel effects in
transistor where the transport has a strong quantum behavior
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