arXiv:cond-mat/0106033AbstractReferencesReviewsResources
Transmission Probability for Interacting Electrons Connected to Reservoirs
Published 2001-06-03Version 1
Transport through small interacting systems connected to noninteracting leads is studied based on the Kubo formalism using a Eliashberg theory of the analytic properties of the vertex part. The transmission probability, by which the conductance is expressed as $g = (2e^2/h) \int d\epsilon (- \partial f / \partial \epsilon) {\cal T}(\epsilon)$, is introduced for interacting electrons. Here $f(\epsilon)$ is the Fermi function, and the transmission probability ${\cal T}(\epsilon)$ is defined in terms of a current vertex or a three-point correlation function. We apply this formulation to a series of Anderson impurities of size N (=1,2,3,4), and calculate ${\cal T}(\epsilon)$ using the order $U^2$ self-energy and current vertex which satisfy a generalized Ward identity. The results show that ${\cal T}(\epsilon)$ has much information about the excitation spectrum: ${\cal T}(\epsilon)$ has two broad peaks of the upper and lower Hubbard bands in addition to N resonant peaks which have direct correspondence with the noninteracting spectrum. The peak structures disappear at high temperatures.