Florian Stäbler Stäbler Dissipation, Interactions, and Heat Transport in Quantum Hall Devices

Dissipation, Interactions, and Heat Transport in Quantum Hall Devices

von Florian Stäbler

Non-equilibrium Bosonization of Quasi-One-Dimensional Systems

Preis unbekannt

Buch in deiner Nähe kaufen


...oder deine aktuelle Postleitzahl eingeben:
oder

Beschreibung

This thesis investigates the behavior of Ohmic contacts (OCs) within quantum hall edge systems, examining their significance in quantum transport phenomena across four different projects. This work includes a review of established findings on the OC, revisiting the heat Coulomb blockade in both single and multichannel configurations. The authors suggest the OC as a model within a transmission line (TL) framework to tackle dissipation potentially stemming from microscopic disorder, addressing the “missing heat” paradox and questioning prevailing theories on energy dissipation. Moreover, the authors investigate the effects of non-local couplings in drift-diffusion systems, demonstrating how they circumvent equilibrium constraints in a single edge state to facilitate heat transfer through correlations caused by interactions. The thesis examines OCs with self-looping edge states to analyze states similar to those in non-local TL systems, uncovering intriguing properties such as anomalous correlation functions and altered electrical and thermal response coefficients. Using a Langevin-like method, the authors analyze the impact of the heat Coulomb blockade on heat noise power and temperature fluctuations, showing that the temperature-temperature correlation function in equilibrium takes on a universal form and uncovering non-Gaussian Full Counting Statistics in transmitted charge as a result of temperature fluctuations. Lastly, this thesis sets the groundwork for future studies, offering a collection of ideas and projects for further exploration, aiming to contribute as a valuable resource for ongoing and future research in quantum transport phenomena. In a broader context, this thesis significantly enhances our comprehension of correlations and heat transport within interacting low-dimensional systems, paving the way for advancements in electronics miniaturization, precision metrology, and the realization of quantum information technologies.


This thesis investigates the behavior of Ohmic contacts (OCs) within quantum hall edge systems, examining their significance in quantum transport phenomena across four different projects. This work includes a review of established findings on the OC, revisiting the heat Coulomb blockade in both single and multichannel configurations. The authors suggest the OC as a model within a transmission line (TL) framework to tackle dissipation potentially stemming from microscopic disorder, addressing the “missing heat” paradox and questioning prevailing theories on energy dissipation. Moreover, the authors investigate the effects of non-local couplings in drift-diffusion systems, demonstrating how they circumvent equilibrium constraints in a single edge state to facilitate heat transfer through correlations caused by interactions. The thesis examines OCs with self-looping edge states to analyze states similar to those in non-local TL systems, uncovering intriguing properties such as anomalous correlation functions and altered electrical and thermal response coefficients. Using a Langevin-like method, the authors analyze the impact of the heat Coulomb blockade on heat noise power and temperature fluctuations, showing that the temperature-temperature correlation function in equilibrium takes on a universal form and uncovering non-Gaussian Full Counting Statistics in transmitted charge as a result of temperature fluctuations. Lastly, this thesis sets the groundwork for future studies, offering a collection of ideas and projects for further exploration, aiming to contribute as a valuable resource for ongoing and future research in quantum transport phenomena. In a broader context, this thesis significantly enhances our comprehension of correlations and heat transport within interacting low-dimensional systems, paving the way for advancements in electronics miniaturization, precision metrology, and the realization of quantum information technologies.


Nominated as an outstanding Ph. D. thesis by the University of Geneva Addresses the paradox of missing energy flux in Quantum Hall systems Makes several experimentally relevant predictions to be pursued in future research

Autor*in

Florian Stäbler

Themen in »Dissipation, Interactions, and Heat Transport in Quantum Hall Devices«

Quantum Hall edge systems Ohmic contacts Energy dissipation Heat Coulomb Blockade Quantum Transport Phenomena Low-dimensional Systems

Stimmen zu »Dissipation, Interactions, and Heat Transport in Quantum Hall Devices«

Details

ISBN: 9783031906701
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 24.06.2025

Link teilen


Über buchnah.de | Die Buchhandlungen | Die Verlage | Impressum & Kontakt | Datenschutz | Presse


Auf dieser Seite kannst Du Buchhandlungen in der Nähe finden