Distribution of waiting times between electron cotunnelings
Samuel L. Rudge, Daniel S. Kosov

TL;DR
This paper extends the formalism of waiting time distributions in quantum transport to include cotunneling, revealing how these quantum processes influence electron waiting times and system statistics in quantum dots and molecules.
Contribution
It introduces an extended Markovian master equation approach to analyze waiting times with cotunneling, providing new insights into quantum transport statistics and nonrenewal behavior.
Findings
Cotunneling can cause zero waiting time electron pairs.
Analytic distributions reveal individual tunneling amplitudes.
High voltage cotunneling slightly alters nonrenewal statistics.
Abstract
In the resonant tunneling regime sequential processes dominate single electron transport through quantum dots or molecules that are weakly coupled to macroscopic electrodes. In the Coulomb blockade regime, however, cotunneling processes dominate. Cotunneling is an inherently quantum phenomenon and thus gives rise to interesting observations, such as an increase in the current shot noise. Since cotunneling processes are inherently fast compared to the sequential processes, it is of interest to examine the short time behaviour of systems where cotunneling plays a role, and whether these systems display nonrenewal statistics. We consider three questions in this paper. Given that an electron has tunneled from the source to the drain via a cotunneling or sequential process, what is the waiting time until another electron cotunnels from the source to the drain? What are the statistical…
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