Junction of several weakly interacting quantum wires: A renormalization group study
- 31 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 66 (16)
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.66.165327
Abstract
We study the conductance of three or more semi-infinite wires which meet at a junction. The electrons in the wires are taken to interact weakly with each other through a short-range density-density interaction, and they encounter a general scattering matrix at the junction. We derive the renormalization group equations satisfied by the S-matrix, and we identify its fixed points and their stabilities. The conductance between any pair of wires is then studied as a function of physical parameters such as temperature. We discuss the possibility of observing the effects of junctions in present day experiments, such as the four-terminal conductance of a quantum wire and crossed quantum wires.Comment: RevTeX, 13 pages, including 4 eps figureKeywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transport through Quasiballistic Quantum Wires: The Role of ContactsPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Many-body spin-related phenomena in ultra low-disorder quantum wiresPhysical Review B, 2001
- Spin-dependent transport in a quasiballistic quantum wirePhysical Review B, 2000
- Interacting electrons with spin in a one-dimensional dirty wire connected to leadsPhysical Review B, 1999
- Quantized conductance in quantum wires with gate-controlled width and electron densityApplied Physics Letters, 1998
- Nonuniversal Conductance Quantization in Quantum WiresPhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Tunneling through a barrier in a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid connected to reservoirsPhysical Review B, 1996
- Renormalization of the one-dimensional conductance in the Luttinger-liquid modelPhysical Review B, 1995
- Landauer conductance of Luttinger liquids with leadsPhysical Review B, 1995
- Reduction of quantized conductance at low temperatures observed in 2 to 10 μm-long quantum wiresSolid State Communications, 1995