Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
The Coulomb Blockade in Quantum Boxes Avraham Schiller Racah Institute of Physics Eran Lebanon (Hebrew University) Frithjof B. Anders (Bremen University) * Funded by the ISF Centers of Excellence Program
2
Charging energy in Quantum boxes Quantum box: Small metallic grain or large semiconductor quantum dot with sizeable Charging energy E C but dense single-particle levels Charging energy: Energy for charging box with one electron
3
T = 0, t = 0 T > 0 and/or t > 0 g
4
Weak single-mode tunneling to the lead High temperature: Perturbation theory about the classical limit Low temperature: PT about well-defined charge configuration PT breaks down near degeneracy points! Effective low-energy model: two-channel Kondo model (Matveev 1991) T << E C
5
Near perfect transmission (single-mode tunneling) Treated within an effective model where the QB and the lead are coupled adiabatically by a 1D geometry with weak backscattering There are Coulomb-blockade oscillations also near perfect transmission (Matveev 1995)
6
No unified treatment of all regimes! Different models and treatments were tailored for the different regimes Certain treatments are based on effective models involving high-energy cutoffs which are not fully determined The crossover behavior between the different regimes is not accessible Some regimes, e.g. strong tunneling amplitudes, remain unexplored A unified nonperturbative treatment of all physical regimes is clearly needed!
7
Point-contact tunneling model g Excess charge inside box
8
Our approach: Use wilson’s numerical renormalization group (NRG) Problem: The NRG is designed to treat noninteracting conducton electrons. In this case the box electrons are interacting! Solution: Introduce collective charge operators: Map Hamiltonian onto: The constraintcan be relaxed for!!!
9
Temperature evolution of the Coulomb-blockade staircase Coulomb staircase fully develops only well below E C Capacitance C(T) =-d /dV B
10
T = 0: Comparison with 2 nd order perturbation theory Excellent agreement with PT at weak coupling at charge plateaus NRG and mapping work!
11
Increasing the tunneling amplitude: breakdown of perturbation theory Reentrance of Coulomb-blockade staircase for t tt T = 0, d = 100
12
Origin of rapid breakdown of perturbation theory and reentrance of CB The relevant physical parameter is the single-particle transmission coefficient In the noninteracting case, the latter is given by
13
Near perfect transmission Prediction of 1D model :
14
Near perfect transmission Euler’s constant Reflectance Prediction of 1D model :
15
Near perfect transmission Single fitting parameter R Extracted R versus noninteracting 1 - T Prediction of 1D model :
16
Two-channel Kondo effect at degeneracy points Two-channel Kondo effect expected to develop at degeneracy points Characterized by log(T) divergence of the junction capacitance: Kondo temperature Log(T) divergence for all values of t
17
Conclusions An NRG approach was devised for solving the charging of a quantum box connected to a lead by single-mode tunneling, applicable to all temperatures, gate voltages and tunneling amplitudes. Rapid breakdown of perturbation theory is found, followed by reentrance of the Coulomb-blockade staircase for tunneling amplitudes exceeding perfect transmission. Two-channel Kondo effect is found at the degeneracy points for all tunneling amplitudes, directly from the Coulomb-blockade Hamiltonian. The tunneling Hamiltonian is capable of describing all regimes of the Coulomb blockade, including the vicinity of perfect transmission.
18
Two-channel Kondo effect in charge sector (Matveev ‘91) Focus on E C >>k B T and on vicinity of a degeneracy point Introduce the charge isospin Lowering and raising isospin operatorsChannel index
19
Two-channel Kondo effect Impurity spin is overscreened by two identical channels A non-Fermi-liquid fixed point is approached for T<<T K
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.