Pauli-Heisenberg Blockade of Electron Quantum Transport
Karl Thibault, Julien Gabelli, Christian Lupien, Bertrand Reulet

TL;DR
This paper provides direct experimental evidence of how temperature and voltage bias influence electron transport correlations in quantum conductors, revealing oscillatory and decorrelation effects at different time scales.
Contribution
It demonstrates the first direct measurement of electron correlation effects controlled by temperature and voltage bias in quantum transport experiments.
Findings
Temperature causes jitter that decorrelates electron flow after ar{k}_BT/
Voltage bias induces strong correlations and anticorrelations oscillating with period h/eV
The method reveals time scales related to voltage and temperature in quantum conductors
Abstract
Conduction of electrons in matter is ultimately described by quantum mechanics. Yet at low frequency or long time scales, low temperature quantum transport is perfectly described by this very simple idea: electrons are emitted by the contacts into the sample which they may cross with a finite probability. Combined with Fermi statistics, this partition of the electron flow accounts for the full statistics of electron transport. When it comes to short time scales, a key question must be clarified: are there correlations between successive attempts of the electrons to cross the sample? While there are theoretical predictions and several experimental indications for the existence of such correlations, no direct experimental evidence has ever been provided. Here we show a direct experimental proof of how temperature and voltage bias control the electron flow: while temperature leads to a…
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