The 2-Channel Kondo Model I: Review of Experimental Evidence for its Realization in Metal Nanoconstrictions
Jan von Delft, D. C. Ralph, R. A. Buhrman, S. K. Upadhyay, R. N., Louie, A. W. W. Ludwig, and Vinay Ambegaokar

TL;DR
This paper reviews experimental evidence for the realization of the 2-channel Kondo effect in metal nanoconstrictions, analyzing conductance anomalies and their scaling behavior, supporting the non-Fermi-liquid interpretation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of Cu point contact experiments, introduces new results with Ti and metallic glasses, and demonstrates that observed ZBAs align with the 2CK model's predictions.
Findings
ZBAs are due to electron scattering from dynamic structural defects
Scaling behavior of conductance matches 2CK model predictions
Properties of ZBAs differ from other proposed mechanisms
Abstract
Certain zero-bias anomalies (ZBAs) in the voltage, temperature and magnetic field dependence of the conductance of quenched Cu point contacts have previously been interpreted to be due to non-magnetic 2-channel Kondo (2CK) scattering from near-degenerate atomic two-level tunneling systems (Ralph and Buhrman, 1992; Ralph et al. 1994), and hence to represent an experimental realization of the non-Fermi-liquid physics of the T=0 fixed point of the 2-channel Kondo model. In this, the first in a series of three papers (I,II,III) devoted to 2-channel Kondo physics, we present a comprehensive review of the quenched Cu ZBA experiments and their 2CK interpretation, including new results on ZBAs in constrictions made from Ti or from metallic glasses. We first review the evidence that the ZBAs are due to electron scattering from stuctural defects that are not static, but possess…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
