Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment

<p>The role of the surroundings, or <italic> environment </italic>, is essential in understanding funda- mental quantum-mechanical concepts, such as quantum measurement and quantum entanglement. It is thought that a dissipative environment may be responsible for certain types of qu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mebrahtu, Henok Tesfamariam
Other Authors: Finkelstein, Gleb
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5487
id ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-5487
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-54872014-05-16T03:35:22ZElectron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative EnvironmentMebrahtu, Henok TesfamariamPhysicsCondensed matter physicsNanosciencecarbon nanotubedissipationluttinger liquidquantum dotquantum phase transitionresonant tunneling<p>The role of the surroundings, or <italic> environment </italic>, is essential in understanding funda- mental quantum-mechanical concepts, such as quantum measurement and quantum entanglement. It is thought that a dissipative environment may be responsible for certain types of quantum (i.e. zero-temperature) phase transitions. We observe such a quantum phase transition in a very basic system: a resonant level coupled to a dissipative environment. Specifically, the resonant level is formed by a quantized state in a carbon nanotube, and the dissipative environment is realized in resistive leads; and we study the shape of the resonant peak by measuring the nanotube electronic conductance.</p><p>In sequential tunneling regime, we find the height of the single-electron conductance peaks increases as the temperature is lowered, although it scales more weakly than the conventional T<super>-1</super>. Moreover, the observed scaling signals a close connec- tion between fluctuations that influence tunneling phenomenon and macroscopic models of the electromagnetic environment.</p><p>In the resonant tunneling regime (temperature smaller than the intrinsic level width), we characterize the resonant conductance peak, with the expectation that the width and height of the resonant peak, both dependent on the tunneling rate, will be suppressed. The observed behavior crucially depends on the ratio of the coupling between the resonant level and the two contacts. In asymmetric barriers the peak width approaches saturation, while the peak height starts to decrease.</p><p>Overall, the peak height shows a non-monotonic temperature dependence. In sym- metric barriers case, the peak width shrinks and we find a regime where the unitary conductance limit is reached in the incoherent resonant tunneling. We interpret this behavior as a manifestation of a quantum phase transition.</p><p>Finally, our setup emulates tunneling in a Luttinger liquid (LL), an interacting one-dimensional electron system, that is distinct from the conventional Fermi liquids formed by electrons in two and three dimensions. Some of the most spectacular properties of LL are revealed in the process of electron tunneling: as a function of the applied bias or temperature the tunneling current demonstrates a non-trivial power-law suppression. Our setup allows us to address many prediction of resonant tunneling in a LL, which have not been experimentally tested yet.</p>DissertationFinkelstein, Gleb2012Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/5487
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Physics
Condensed matter physics
Nanoscience
carbon nanotube
dissipation
luttinger liquid
quantum dot
quantum phase transition
resonant tunneling
spellingShingle Physics
Condensed matter physics
Nanoscience
carbon nanotube
dissipation
luttinger liquid
quantum dot
quantum phase transition
resonant tunneling
Mebrahtu, Henok Tesfamariam
Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
description <p>The role of the surroundings, or <italic> environment </italic>, is essential in understanding funda- mental quantum-mechanical concepts, such as quantum measurement and quantum entanglement. It is thought that a dissipative environment may be responsible for certain types of quantum (i.e. zero-temperature) phase transitions. We observe such a quantum phase transition in a very basic system: a resonant level coupled to a dissipative environment. Specifically, the resonant level is formed by a quantized state in a carbon nanotube, and the dissipative environment is realized in resistive leads; and we study the shape of the resonant peak by measuring the nanotube electronic conductance.</p><p>In sequential tunneling regime, we find the height of the single-electron conductance peaks increases as the temperature is lowered, although it scales more weakly than the conventional T<super>-1</super>. Moreover, the observed scaling signals a close connec- tion between fluctuations that influence tunneling phenomenon and macroscopic models of the electromagnetic environment.</p><p>In the resonant tunneling regime (temperature smaller than the intrinsic level width), we characterize the resonant conductance peak, with the expectation that the width and height of the resonant peak, both dependent on the tunneling rate, will be suppressed. The observed behavior crucially depends on the ratio of the coupling between the resonant level and the two contacts. In asymmetric barriers the peak width approaches saturation, while the peak height starts to decrease.</p><p>Overall, the peak height shows a non-monotonic temperature dependence. In sym- metric barriers case, the peak width shrinks and we find a regime where the unitary conductance limit is reached in the incoherent resonant tunneling. We interpret this behavior as a manifestation of a quantum phase transition.</p><p>Finally, our setup emulates tunneling in a Luttinger liquid (LL), an interacting one-dimensional electron system, that is distinct from the conventional Fermi liquids formed by electrons in two and three dimensions. Some of the most spectacular properties of LL are revealed in the process of electron tunneling: as a function of the applied bias or temperature the tunneling current demonstrates a non-trivial power-law suppression. Our setup allows us to address many prediction of resonant tunneling in a LL, which have not been experimentally tested yet.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Finkelstein, Gleb
author_facet Finkelstein, Gleb
Mebrahtu, Henok Tesfamariam
author Mebrahtu, Henok Tesfamariam
author_sort Mebrahtu, Henok Tesfamariam
title Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
title_short Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
title_full Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
title_fullStr Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
title_full_unstemmed Electron Transport through Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots in A Dissipative Environment
title_sort electron transport through carbon nanotube quantum dots in a dissipative environment
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5487
work_keys_str_mv AT mebrahtuhenoktesfamariam electrontransportthroughcarbonnanotubequantumdotsinadissipativeenvironment
_version_ 1716666994918424576