The formation of nonequilibrium steady states in interacting double quantum dots: When coherences dominate the charge distribution
R. H\"artle, A. J. Millis

TL;DR
This paper studies how coherences influence the formation of nonequilibrium steady states in double quantum dots, revealing that interdot coherence significantly affects charge distribution and steady state properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the role of quantum coherences in steady state formation in double quantum dots using a numerically exact method, comparing with approximate theories.
Findings
Interdot coherence can be larger under bias voltage than in equilibrium.
Coherence significantly influences the population difference between dots.
The steady state formation is strongly affected by initial conditions and coherence.
Abstract
We theoretically investigate the full time evolution of a nonequilibrium double quantum dot structure from initial conditions corresponding to different product states (no entanglement between dot and lead) to a nonequilibrium steady state. The structure is described by a two-level spinless Anderson model where the levels are coupled to two leads held at different chemical potentials. The problem is solved by a numerically exact hierarchical master equation technique and the results are compared to approximate ones obtained from Born-Markov theory. The methods allow us to study the time evolution up to times of order of the bare hybridization time, enabling eludication of the role of the initial state on the transient dynamics, coherent charge oscillations and an interaction-induced renormalization of energy levels. We find that when the system carries a single electron on…
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