Nonequilibrium Transport through a Vertical Quantum Dot in the Absence of Spin-Flip Energy Relaxation
- 23 May 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 88 (23) , 236802
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.88.236802
Abstract
We investigate nonequilibrium transport in the absence of spin-flip energy relaxation in a few-electron quantum dot artificial atom. Novel nonequilibrium tunneling processes involving high-spin states, which cannot be excited from the ground state because of spin blockade, and other processes involving more than two charge states are observed. These processes cannot be explained by orthodox Coulomb blockade theory. The absence of effective spin relaxation induces considerable fluctuation of the spin, charge, and total energy of the quantum dot. Although these features are revealed clearly by pulse excitation measurements, they are also observed in conventional dc current characteristics of quantum dots.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spin-dependent energy relaxation inside a quantum dotPhysica B: Condensed Matter, 2001
- Few-electron quantum dotsReports on Progress in Physics, 2001
- Energy relaxation process in a quantum dot studied by DC current and pulse-excited current measurementsPhysica B: Condensed Matter, 2001
- Spin Relaxation Quenching in Semiconductor Quantum DotsPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Direct Coulomb and Exchange Interaction in Artificial AtomsPhysical Review Letters, 2000
- Excitation Spectra of Circular, Few-Electron Quantum DotsScience, 1997
- Chaos, Interactions, and Nonequilibrium Effects in the Tunneling Resonance Spectra of Ultrasmall Metallic ParticlesPhysical Review Letters, 1997
- Shell Filling and Spin Effects in a Few Electron Quantum DotPhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Spin Blockades in Linear and Nonlinear Transport through Quantum DotsPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- Competing channels in single-electron tunneling through a quantum dotPhysical Review Letters, 1993