arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:cond-mat/0604527AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Symmetry breaking and Wigner molecules in few-electron quantum dots

Constantine Yannouleas, Uzi Landman

Published 2006-04-22Version 1

We discuss symmetry breaking in two-dimensional quantum dots resulting from strong interelectron repulsion relative to the zero-point kinetic energy associated with the confining potential. Such symmetry breaking leads to the emergence of crystalline arrangements of electrons in the dot. The so-called Wigner molecules form already at field-free conditions. The appearance of rotating Wigner molecules in circular dots under high magnetic field, and their relation to magic angular momenta and quantum-Hall-effect fractional fillings, is also discussed. Recent calculations for two electrons in an elliptic quantum dot, using exact diagonalization and an approximate generalized-Heitler-London treatment, show that the electrons can localize and form a molecular dimer for screened interelectron repulsion. The calculated singlet-triplet splitting (J) as a function of the magnetic field (B) agrees with cotunneling measurements; its behavior reflects the effective dissociation of the dimer for large B. Knowledge of the dot shape and of J(B) allows determination of two measures of entanglement (concurrence and von Neumann entropy for indistinguishable fermions), whose behavior correlates also with the dissociation of the dimer. The theoretical value for the concurrence at B=0 agrees with the experimental estimates.

Comments: LATEX, 12 pages with 6 figures. Invited talk at TNT2005 (Trends in Nanotechnology). To download a file with figures of higher quality, click http://www.prism.gatech.edu/~ph274cy/ (go to publication #74)
Journal: Physica status solidi (a) 203, 1160 (2006)
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:cond-mat/0506143 (Published 2005-06-06, updated 2005-09-07)
Evidence of correlation in spin excitations of few-electron quantum dots
arXiv:1311.6589 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2013-11-26)
Symmetry breaking in a mechanical resonator made from a carbon nanotube
arXiv:1007.4849 [cond-mat.mes-hall] (Published 2010-07-27, updated 2010-12-09)
Few-electron quantum dots in III-V ternary alloys: role of fluctuations