Population switching and charge sensing in quantum dots: A case for quantum phase transitions
Tuesday 5th may 2010 at 4pm
CNRS Bât K, on 1st floor - Room to be confirmed
Moshe Goldstein
(Department of Physics, Bar-Ilan University, Israel)
“Population switching'' is a phenomenon involving
a steep filling of a narrow level in a quantum dot at the expense of a
wide one as a common gate voltage is varied. This effect has been
discussed in several contexts, including charge sensing by means of a
current-carrying quantum point contact (QPC), as well as in relation
with lapses of the transmission phase of a quantum dot. Is the switching
involved abrupt, in which case one is facing a first order quantum
phase transition?
Mapping this problem onto a two-species Coulomb gas representation, we demonstrate that it is equivalent to an orbital Kondo model, and find that the switching is steep but continuous, in agreement with previous studies; however, when one tries to measure this behavior by electrostatically coupling one of the levels to a charge detecting QPC, one may render the switching abrupt.
We show that this quantum phase transition is triggered by a change in physics from a Mahan exciton controlled dynamics to an Anderson orthogonality catastrophe controlled dynamics. Including the spin degree of freedom may lead to a realization of the SU(4) Kondo effect, as well as to quantum criticality of the two- impurity-Kondo type.






