Conductance of a quantum wire at low electron density
K. A. Matveev

TL;DR
This paper investigates how electron interactions in a low-density quantum wire lead to a Wigner crystal state, affecting conductance through spin-charge coupling and temperature-dependent corrections, revealing a transition from 2e^2/h to e^2/h conductance.
Contribution
It introduces a model connecting electron crystallization, spin chain behavior, and conductance corrections in low-density quantum wires, highlighting the impact of inhomogeneity and temperature.
Findings
At zero temperature, conductance remains 2e^2/h despite electron ordering.
Low-temperature conductance correction is exponentially small, proportional to -exp(-πJ/2T).
At high temperatures, conductance approaches a universal value of e^2/h.
Abstract
We study the transport of electrons through a long quantum wire connecting two bulk leads. As the electron density in the wire is lowered, the Coulomb interactions lead to short-range crystalline ordering of electrons. In this Wigner crystal state the spins of electrons form an antiferromagnetic Heisenberg spin chain with exponentially small exchange coupling J. Inhomogeneity of the electron density due to the coupling of the wire to the leads results in violation of spin-charge separation in the device. As a result the spins affect the conductance of the wire. At zero temperature the low-energy spin excitations propagate freely through the wire, and its conductance remains 2e^2/h. Since the energy of the elementary excitations in the spin chain (spinons) cannot exceed \pi J/2, the conductance of the wire acquires an exponentially small negative correction \delta G \propto - exp(-\pi…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Magnetic properties of thin films
