Quantum and Many-Body Effects on the Capacitance of a Quantum Dot
Preprint
- 28 January 1994
Abstract
We calculate exactly, using finite size techniques, the quantum mechanical and many-body effects to the self-capacitance of a spherical quantum dot in the regime of extreme confinement, where the radius of the sphere is much smaller than the effective Bohr radius. We find that the self-capacitance oscillates as a function of the number of electrons close to its classical value. We also find that the electrostatic energy extrapolates to zero when $N=1$, suggesting that the energy scales like $e^{2}N(N-1)$. This establishes, at least for this configuration, that the semiclassical description of Coulomb charging effects in terms of capacitances holds to a good approximation even at very small scales.
Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 1994-01-28, ArXiv
- Published version: Physical Review B, 50 (12), 8885.
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: