Electron tunneling through small metallic islands with low capacitance is
studied. The large charging energy in these systems is responsible for
nonperturbative Coulomb blockade effects. We further consider the effect of
electron interactions in the electrodes. In junctions with high resistance
compared to the quantum resistance transport can be described by sequential
tunneling. If the resistance is lower, quantum fluctuations, higher order
coherent processes, and eventually resonant tunneling become important. We
present a path integral real-time approach, which allows a systematic
diagrammatic classification of these processes. An important process is
``inelastic resonant tunneling'', where different electrons tunnel coherently
between the electrodes and the island. Physical quantities like the current and
the average charge on the island can be deduced. We find a strong
renormalization of the system parameters and, in addition, a finite lifetime
broadening. It results in a pronounced broadening and smearing of the Coulomb
oscillations of the conductance. These effects are important in an
experimentally accessible range of temperatures. The electron interaction in
the electrodes is modeled by a Luttinger liquid. It leads to non-analytic
kernels in the effective action. The diagrammatic expansions can be performed
also in this case, resulting in power-law current-voltage characteristics.Comment: 19 pages, latex, 6 figures (available on request