386 research outputs found
Spin Fine Structure in Optically Excited Quantum Dot Molecules
The interaction between spins in coupled quantum dots is revealed in distinct
fine structure patterns in the measured optical spectra of InAs/GaAs double
quantum dot molecules containing zero, one, or two excess holes. The fine
structure is explained well in terms of a uniquely molecular interplay of spin
exchange interactions, Pauli exclusion and orbital tunneling. This knowledge is
critical for converting quantum dot molecule tunneling into a means of
optically coupling not just orbitals, but spins.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, added material, (published
Photoluminescence Spectroscopy of the Molecular Biexciton in Vertically Stacked Quantum Dot Pairs
We present photoluminescence studies of the molecular neutral
biexciton-exciton spectra of individual vertically stacked InAs/GaAs quantum
dot pairs. We tune either the hole or the electron levels of the two dots into
tunneling resonances. The spectra are described well within a few-level,
few-particle molecular model. Their properties can be modified broadly by an
electric field and by structural design, which makes them highly attractive for
controlling nonlinear optical properties.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, (v2, revision based on reviewers comments,
published
Electrically tunable g-factors in quantum dot molecular spin states
We present a magneto-photoluminescence study of individual vertically stacked
InAs/GaAs quantum dot pairs separated by thin tunnel barriers. As an applied
electric field tunes the relative energies of the two dots, we observe a strong
resonant increase or decrease in the g-factors of different spin states that
have molecular wavefunctions distributed over both quantum dots. We propose a
phenomenological model for the change in g-factor based on resonant changes in
the amplitude of the wavefunction in the barrier due to the formation of
bonding and antibonding orbitals.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Accepted by Phys. Rev. Lett. New version reflects
response to referee comment
Sequential and co-tunneling behavior in the temperature-dependent thermopower of few-electron quantum dots
We have studied the temperature dependent thermopower of gate-defined,
lateral quantum dots in the Coulomb blockade regime using an electron heating
technique. The line shape of the thermopower oscillations depends strongly on
the contributing tunneling processes. Between 1.5 K and 40 mK a crossover from
a pure sawtooth- to an intermitted sawtooth-like line shape is observed. The
latter is attributed to the increasing dominance of cotunneling processes in
the Coulomb blockade regime at low temperatures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Thermopower of Kondo Effect in Single Quantum Dot Systems with Orbital at Finite Temperatures
We investigate the thermopower due to the orbital Kondo effect in a single
quantum dot system by means of the noncrossing approximation. It is elucidated
how the asymmetry of tunneling resonance due to the orbital Kondo effect
affects the thermopower under gate-voltage and magnetic-field control.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, proceeding of Second International Symposium on
Nanometer-Scale Quantum Physic
Measuring Temperature Gradients over Nanometer Length Scales
When a quantum dot is subjected to a thermal gradient, the temperature of
electrons entering the dot can be determined from the dot's thermocurrent if
the conductance spectrum and background temperature are known. We demonstrate
this technique by measuring the temperature difference across a 15 nm quantum
dot embedded in a nanowire. This technique can be used when the dot's energy
states are separated by many kT and will enable future quantitative
investigations of electron-phonon interaction, nonlinear thermoelectric
effects, and the effciency of thermoelectric energy conversion in quantum dots.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
From Alkanes to Carboxylic Acids: Terminal Oxygenation by a Fungal Peroxygenase
5 páginas.-- 4 figuras.-- 24 referencias.-- Supporting information for this article can be found under:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.201604915.Este artículo está en abierto en el enlace de la revista y puede descargar el pdf. originalA new heme–thiolate peroxidase catalyzes the hydroxylation of n-alkanes at the terminal position—a challenging reaction in organic chemistry—with H2O2 as the only cosubstrate. Besides the primary product, 1-dodecanol, the conversion of dodecane yielded dodecanoic, 12-hydroxydodecanoic, and 1,12-dodecanedioic acids, as identified by GC–MS. Dodecanal could be detected only in trace amounts, and 1,12-dodecanediol was not observed, thus suggesting that dodecanoic acid is the branch point between mono- and diterminal hydroxylation. Simultaneously, oxygenation was observed at other hydrocarbon chain positions (preferentially C2 and C11). Similar results were observed in reactions of tetradecane. The pattern of products formed, together with data on the incorporation of 18O from the cosubstrate H218O2, demonstrate that the enzyme acts as a peroxygenase that is able to catalyze a cascade of mono- and diterminal oxidation reactions of long-chain n-alkanes to give carboxylic acids.The research was financed by the project NCN DEC-2012/07/B/ST5/02448 and the research program P1-0055 of the Slovenian Research Agency. Authors thank Prof. Mojca Cepic and Prof. Hideo Takezoe for valuable discussions.Peer reviewe
Thermal rectification effects of multiple semiconductor quantum dot junctions
Based on the multiple energy level Anderson model, this study theoretically
examines the thermoelectric effects of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) in the
nonlinear response regime. The charge and heat currents in the sequential
tunneling process are calculated by using the Keldysh Green's function
technique. Results show that the thermal rectification effect can be observed
in a multiple QD junction system, whereas the tunneling rate, size fluctuation,
and location distribution of QD significantly influence the rectification
efficiency.Comment: 5 pages, 8figure
Optically-controlled single-qubit rotations in self-assembled InAs quantum dots
We present a theory of the optical control of the spin of an electron in an
InAs quantum dot. We show how two Raman-detuned laser pulses can be used to
obtain arbitrary single-qubit rotations via the excitation of an intermediate
trion state. Our theory takes into account a finite in-plane hole -factor
and hole-mixing. We show that such rotations can be performed to high
fidelities with pulses lasting a few tens of picoseconds.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; minor changes, J-ref adde
Spin-dependent thermoelectric transport through double quantum dots
We study thermoelectric transport through double quantum dots system with
spin-dependent interdot coupling and ferromagnetic electrodes by means of the
non-equilibrium Green function in the linear response regime. It is found that
the thermoelectric coefficients are strongly dependent on the splitting of
interdot coupling, the relative magnetic configurations and the spin
polarization of leads. In particular, the thermoelectric efficiency can achieve
considerable value in parallel configuration when the effective interdot
coupling and tunnel coupling between QDs and the leads for spin-down electrons
are small. Moreover, the thermoelectric efficiency increases with the intradot
Coulomb interactions increasing and can reach very high value at an appropriate
temperature. In the presence of the magnetic field, the spin accumulation in
leads strongly suppresses the thermoelectric efficiency and a pure spin
thermopower can be obtained.Comment: 5 figure
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