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Conductance Suppression due to Correlated Electron Transport in Coupled Double-dots

Geza Toth, Alexei O. Orlov, Islamshah Amlani, Craig S. Lent, Gary H. Bernstein, Gregory L. Snider

Published 1999-11-11Version 1

The electrostatic interaction between two capacitively-coupled metal double-dots is studied at low temperatures. Experiments show that when the Coulomb blockade is lifted by applying appropriate gate biases to both double-dots, the conductance through each double-dot becomes significantly lower than when only one double-dot is conducting. A master equation is derived for the system and the results obtained agree well with the experimental data. The model suggests that the conductance lowering in each double-dot is caused by a single-electron tunneling in the other double-dot. Here, each double-dot responds to the instantaneous, rather than average, potentials on the other double-dot. This leads to correlated electron motion within the system, where the position of a single electron in one double-dot controls the tunneling rate through the other double-dot.

Comments: 19 pages [pre-print style], 8 figures, accepted for Phys. Rev. B
Journal: Phys. Rev. B, vol. 60, number 24, 16906-16912 (15 Dec 1999-II)
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