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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

What lurks below the last plateau: experimental studies of the 0.7 × 2e(2)/h conductance anomaly in one-dimensional systems.

Adam P. Micolich
- 14 Oct 2011 - 
- Vol. 23, Iss: 44, pp 443201-443201
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TLDR
In this article, a review report on experimental studies of fractionally quantized plateaus in semiconductor quantum point contacts and quantum wires, focusing on the 0.7 × 2e(2)/h conductance anomaly, its analogues at higher conductances and the zero-bias peak observed in the dc source-drain bias for conductances less than 2e (2) 2 /h.
Abstract
The integer quantised conductance of one-dimensional electron systems is a well-understood effect of quantum confinement. A number of fractionally quantised plateaus are also commonly observed. They are attributed to many-body effects, but their precise origin is still a matter of debate, having attracted considerable interest over the past 15 years. This review reports on experimental studies of fractionally quantised plateaus in semiconductor quantum point contacts and quantum wires, focusing on the 0.7 × 2e(2)/h conductance anomaly, its analogues at higher conductances and the zero-bias peak observed in the dc source-drain bias for conductances less than 2e(2)/h.

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Citations
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Quantized Thermal Conductance of Dielectric Quantum Wires

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Landauer formulation of transport theory to predict that dielectric quantum wires should exhibit quantized thermal conductance at low temperatures in a ballistic phonon regime.
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A review of progress in the physics of open quantum systems: theory and experiment.

TL;DR: A detailed discussion of the behavior of mesoscopic devices (and other OQSs) in terms of the projection-operator formalism, and discusses experiments on mesoscopic quantum point contacts that provide evidence of the environmentally-mediated coupling of quantum states.
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A review of progress in the physics of open quantum systems: theory and experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a detailed discussion of the behavior of OQSs in terms of the projection operator formalism, according to which the system under study is considered to be comprised of a localized region, embedded into a well-defined environment of scattering wavefunctions (with $Q+P=1$).

Density dependent spin polarisation in ultra low-disorder quantum wires

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present conductance measurements on ultra-low-disorder quantum wires supportive of a spin polarization at B = 0.5-0.7)x2e(2)/h in conductance data.
Journal Article

All-Electric Quantum Point Contact Spin Polarizer

TL;DR: Experimental evidence is presented that a quantum point contact -- a short wire -- made from a semiconductor with high intrinsic spin-orbit coupling can generate a completely spin-polarized current when its lateral confinement is made highly asymmetric.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, the transport coefficients of the Anderson model are calculated by extending Wilson's numerical renormalization group method to finite-temperature Green functions, and accurate results for the frequency and temperature dependence of the single-particle spectral densities and transport time tau ( omega, T) are obtained and used to extract the temperature dependence.
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TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the ground state is unmagnetized in one-dimensional systems with symmetric potentials, and the same theorem holds in two or three dimensions.
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TL;DR: Although the Kondo effect is a well known and widely studied phenomenon in condensed-matter physics, it continues to capture the imagination of experimentalists and theorists alike as discussed by the authors. But why would anyone still want to study a physical phenomenon that was discovered in the 1930s, explained in the 1960s and has been the subject of numerous reviews since the 1970s?
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Coherent branched flow in a two-dimensional electron gas

TL;DR: In this article, the electron flow from the point contact forms narrow, branching strands instead of smoothly spreading fans, and the strands are decorated by interference fringes separated by half the Fermi wavelength.
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Fano Resonances in Electronic Transport through a Single Electron Transistor

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors observed asymmetric Fano resonances in the conductance of a single-electron transistor, resulting from interference between a resonant and a non-resonant path through the system.
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