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Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots.

Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots. Research Abstract Details 

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  • Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots. Abstract Text:

    a makarovskiA Makarovski,j liuJ Liu,g finkelsteinG Finkelstein,a makarovskiA Makarovski,j liuJ Liu,g finkelsteinG Finkelstein,

    We study the evolution of conductance regimes in carbon nanotubes with doubly degenerate orbitals (shells) by controlling the contact transparency within the same sample. For sufficiently open contacts, Kondo behavior is observed for 1, 2, and 3 electrons in the topmost shell. As the contacts are opened more, the sample enters the "mixed valence" regime, where different charge states are strongly hybridized by electron tunneling. Here, the conductance as a function of gate voltage shows pronounced modulations with a period of four electrons, and all single-electron features are washed away at low temperature. We successfully describe this behavior by a simple formula with no fitting parameters. Finally, we find a surprisingly small energy scale that controls the temperature evolution of conductance and the tunneling density of states in the mixed valence regime.

    Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots. Publishing Authors By Initials

    a makarovskiA Makarovski,j liuJ Liu,g finkelsteinG Finkelstein,a makarovskiA Makarovski,j liuJ Liu,g finkelsteinG Finkelstein,

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    Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots. Journal Published:

    PUBLICATION TYPE: Research Support, U.S. Gov't,

    Journal: Physical review letters

    VOLUME: 99

    Page Numbers: 066801

    Journal Abbreviation: Phys. Rev. Lett.

    ISSN: 0031-9007

    DAY: 7

    MONTH: 08

    YEAR: 2007

    Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots. Information

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    LANGUAGE: eng

    NlmUniqueID: 401141

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    Grant and Affiliation Information for Evolution of transport regimes in carbon nanotube quantum dots.

    AFFILIATION: Department of Physics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.

    Country: United States

    United States Research PublicationUnited States Research Publication

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    MEDLINETA: Phys Rev Lett

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