We present a microscopic theory for interacting graphene armchair nanoribbon quantum dots. Long range interaction processes are responsible for Coulomb blockade and spin-charge separation. Short range ones, arising from the underlying honeycomb lattice of graphene, smear the spin-charge separation and induce exchange correlations between bulk electrons - delocalized on the ribbon - and single electrons localized at the two ends. As a consequence, entangled end-bulk states where the bulk spin is no longer a conserved quantity occur. Entanglement's signature is the occurrence of negative differential conductance effects in a fully symmetric set-up due to symmetry-forbidden transitions
Graphene quantum devices, such as single electron transistors and quantum dots, have been a vital fi...
ABSTRACT: The unique ultrarelativistic, massless, nature of electron states in two-dimensional exten...
Using the non-equilibrium Green’s function method and the Keldysh formalism, we study the effects of...
Abstract – We present a microscopic theory for interacting graphene armchair nanoribbon quantum dots...
Abstract – We present a microscopic theory for interacting graphene armchair nanoribbon quantum dots...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We study the electronic screening of the long-range Coulomb interaction in graphene nanoribbons (GNR...
We study the electronic structure of finite armchair graphene nanoribbons using density-functional t...
We study the electronic structure of finite armchair graphene nanoribbons using density-functional t...
e study the effect of electron-electron interaction and spin on electronic and transport properties ...
Graphene, a single-layer network of carbon atoms, shows outstanding electrical and mechanical proper...
Graphene has been identified as a promising material with numerous applications, particularly in spi...
Graphene quantum devices, such as single electron transistors and quantum dots, have been a vital fi...
ABSTRACT: The unique ultrarelativistic, massless, nature of electron states in two-dimensional exten...
Using the non-equilibrium Green’s function method and the Keldysh formalism, we study the effects of...
Abstract – We present a microscopic theory for interacting graphene armchair nanoribbon quantum dots...
Abstract – We present a microscopic theory for interacting graphene armchair nanoribbon quantum dots...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We investigate spin effects in transport across fully interacting, finite size graphene armchair nan...
We study the electronic screening of the long-range Coulomb interaction in graphene nanoribbons (GNR...
We study the electronic structure of finite armchair graphene nanoribbons using density-functional t...
We study the electronic structure of finite armchair graphene nanoribbons using density-functional t...
e study the effect of electron-electron interaction and spin on electronic and transport properties ...
Graphene, a single-layer network of carbon atoms, shows outstanding electrical and mechanical proper...
Graphene has been identified as a promising material with numerous applications, particularly in spi...
Graphene quantum devices, such as single electron transistors and quantum dots, have been a vital fi...
ABSTRACT: The unique ultrarelativistic, massless, nature of electron states in two-dimensional exten...
Using the non-equilibrium Green’s function method and the Keldysh formalism, we study the effects of...