Dephasing and Hyperfine Interaction in Carbon Nanotubes Double Quantum Dots: Disordered Case
Andres A. Reynoso, Karsten Flensberg

TL;DR
This paper provides a theoretical analysis of dephasing in carbon nanotube double quantum dots, highlighting how disorder-induced valley mixing and hyperfine interactions influence return probability experiments and dephasing times.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model accounting for disorder-induced valley mixing and hyperfine interactions, revealing their impact on dephasing and measurement outcomes in CNT double quantum dots.
Findings
Valley mixing increases the saturation value of the return probability.
Multiple Landau-Zener processes significantly affect measurement outcomes.
Disorder effects are prominent with perpendicular magnetic fields.
Abstract
We study theoretically the \emph{return probability experiment}, used to measure the dephasing time , in a double quantum dot (DQD) in semiconducting carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with spin-orbit coupling and disorder induced valley mixing. Dephasing is due to hyperfine interaction with the spins of the C nuclei. Due to the valley and spin degrees of freedom four bounded states exist for any given longitudinal mode in the quantum dot. At zero magnetic field the spin-orbit coupling and the valley mixing split those four states into two Kramers doublets. The valley mixing term for a given dot is determined by the intra-dot disorder and therefore the states in the Kramers doublets belonging to different dots are different. We show how nonzero single-particle interdot tunneling amplitudes between states belonging to different doublets give rise to new avoided crossings, as a…
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