Spin-Orbit Effects in Carbon-Nanotube Double Quantum Dots
S. Weiss, E.I. Rashba, F. Kuemmeth, H. O. H Churchill, K. Flensberg

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex energy spectrum of double quantum dots in carbon nanotubes, highlighting the effects of spin-orbit interaction, Coulomb forces, and tunneling, with implications for quantum information applications.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of spin-orbit effects in carbon nanotube double quantum dots, revealing how these interactions influence ground states and electron dynamics.
Findings
Spin-orbit coupling splits the spectrum into two Kramers doublets.
Coulomb interaction can invert the ground state symmetry.
Electron dynamics are governed by spin, isospin, and left-right symmetry selection rules.
Abstract
We study the energy spectrum of symmetric double quantum dots in narrow-gap carbon nanotubes with one and two electrostatically confined electrons in the presence of spin-orbit and Coulomb interactions. Compared to GaAs quantum dots, the spectrum exhibits a much richer structure because of the spin-orbit interaction that couples the electron's isospin to its real spin through two independent coupling constants. In a single dot, both constants combine to split the spectrum into two Kramers doublets, while the antisymmetric constant solely controls the difference in the tunneling rates of the Kramers doublets between the dots. For the two-electron regime, the detailed structure of the spin-orbit split energy spectrum is investigated as a function of detuning between the quantum dots in a 22-dimensional Hilbert space within the framework of a single-longitudinal-mode model. We find a…
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