Latest Research Papers In Condensed Matter Physics | (Cond-Mat.Mes-Hall) 2019-03-16

Latest Papers in Condensed Matter Physics

Mesoscale And Nanoscale Physics


Electronic Transport and Thermopower in 2D and 3D Heterostructures--A Theory Perspective (1901.10976v2)

Arnab K. Majee, Adithya Kommini, Zlatan Aksamija

2019-01-30

In this review, we discuss the impact of interfaces and heterojuctions on the electronic and thermoelectric transport properties of materials. We review recent progress in understanding electronic transport in two-dimensional (2D) materials ranging from graphene to transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), their homojunctions (grain boundaries), lateral heterojunctions (such as graphene/MoS lateral interfaces), and vertical van der Waals (vdW) heterostructures. We also review work in thermoelectric properties of 2D heterojunctions, as well as their applications in creating devices such as resonant tunneling diodes (RTDs). Lastly, we turn our focus to work in three-dimensional (3D) heterostructures. While transport in 3D heterostructures has been researched for several decades, here we review recent progress in theory and simulation of quantum effects on transport via the Wigner and non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGF) approaches. These simulation techniques have been successfully applied toward understanding the impact of heterojunctions on the thermoelectric properties, with applications in energy harvesting, and electron resonant tunneling, with applications in RTDs. We conclude that tremendous progress has been made in both simulation and experiments toward the goal of understanding transport in heterostructures and this progress will soon be parlayed into improved energy converters and quantum nanoelectronic devices.

Range separation: The divide between local structures and field theories (1902.03289v2)

David M. Rogers

2019-02-08

This work presents parallel histories of the development of two modern theories of condensed matter: the theory of electron structure in quantum mechanics, and the theory of liquid structure in statistical mechanics. Comparison shows that key revelations in both are not only remarkably similar, but even follow along a common thread of controversy that marks progress from antiquity through to the present. This theme appears as a creative tension between two competing philosophies, that of short range structure (atomistic models) on the one hand, and long range structure (continuum or density functional models) on the other. The timeline and technical content are designed to build up a set of key relations as guideposts for using density functional theories together with atomistic simulation.

Finite frequency noise in chiral Luttinger liquid coupled to phonons (1903.06144v1)

Edvin G. Idrisov

2019-03-14

We study transport between Quantum Hall (QH) edge states at filling factor in the presence of electron-acoustic-phonon coupling. Performing a Bogoliubov-Valatin (BV) trasformation the low-energy spectrum of interacting electron-phonon system is presented. The electron-phonon interaction splits the spectrum into charged and neutral "downstream" and neutral "upstream" modes with different velocities. In the regimes of dc and periodic ac biases the tunelling current and non-equilibrium finite frequency non-symmetrized noise are calculated perturbatively in tunneling coupling of quantum point contact (QPC). We show that the presence of electron-phonon interaction strongly modifies noise and current relations compared to free-fermion case.

Demonstration of nonstoquastic Hamiltonian in coupled superconducting flux qubits (1903.06139v1)

I. Ozfidan, C. Deng, A. Y. Smirnov, T. Lanting, R. Harris, L. Swenson, J. Whittaker, F. Altomare, M. Babcock, C. Baron, A. J. Berkley, K. Boothby, H. Christiani, P. Bunyk, C. Enderud, B. Evert, M. Hager, J. Hilton, S. Huang, E. Hoskinson, M. W. Johnson, K. Jooya, E. Ladizinsky, N. Ladizinsky, R. Li, A. MacDonald, D. Marsden, G. Marsden, T. Medina, R. Molavi, R. Neufeld, M. Nissen, M. Norouzpour, T. Oh, I. Pavlov, I. Perminov, G. Poulin-Lamarre, M. Reis, T. Prescott, C. Rich, Y. Sato, G. Sterling, N. Tsai, M. Volkmann, W. Wilkinson, J. Yao, M. H. Amin

2019-03-14

Quantum annealing (QA) is a heuristic algorithm for finding low-energy configurations of a system, with applications in optimization, machine learning, and quantum simulation. Up to now, all implementations of QA have been limited to qubits coupled via a single degree of freedom. This gives rise to a stoquastic Hamiltonian that has no sign problem in quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) simulations. In this paper, we report implementation and measurements of two superconducting flux qubits coupled via two canonically conjugate degrees of freedom (charge and flux) to achieve a nonstoquastic Hamiltonian. Such coupling can enhance performance of QA processors, extend the range of quantum simulations. We perform microwave spectroscopy to extract circuit parameters and show that the charge coupling manifests itself as a YY interaction in the computational basis. We observe destructive interference in quantum coherent oscillations between the computational basis states of the two-qubit system. Finally, we show that the extracted Hamiltonian is nonstoquastic over a wide range of parameters.

Selective-area chemical beam epitaxy of in-plane InAs one-dimensional channels grown on InP(001), InP(111)B, and InP(110) surfaces (1808.04563v2)

Joon Sue Lee, Sukgeun Choi, Mihir Pendharkar, Dan J. Pennachio, Brian Markman, Micheal Seas, Sebastian Koelling, Marcel A. Verheijen, Lucas Casparis, Karl D. Petersson, Ivana Petkovic, Vanessa Schaller, Mark J. W. Rodwell, Charles M. Marcus, Peter Krogstrup, Leo P. Kouwenhoven, Erik P. A. M. Bakkers, Chris J. Palmstrøm

2018-08-14

We report on the selective-area chemical beam epitaxial growth of InAs in-plane, one-dimensional (1-D) channels using patterned SiO-coated InP(001), InP(111)B, and InP(110) substrates to establish a scalable platform for topological superconductor networks. Top-view scanning electron micrographs show excellent surface selectivity and dependence of major facet planes on the substrate orientations and ridge directions, and the ratios of the surface energies of the major facet planes were estimated. Detailed structural properties and defects in the InAs nanowires (NWs) were characterized by transmission electron microscopic analysis of cross-sections perpendicular to the NW ridge direction and along the NW ridge direction. Electrical transport properties of the InAs NWs were investigated using Hall bars, a field effect mobility device, a quantum dot, and an Aharonov-Bohm loop device, which reflect the strong spin-orbit interaction and phase-coherent transport characteristic in the selectively grown InAs systems. This study demonstrates that selective-area chemical beam epitaxy is a scalable approach to realize semiconductor 1-D channel networks with the excellent surface selectivity and this material system is suitable for quantum transport studies.



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