Abstract
We study the electrical transport of a harmonically bound, single-molecule C60 shuttle operating in the Coulomb blockade regime, i.e. single electron shuttling. In particular, we examine the dependance of the tunnel current on an ultra-small stationary force exerted on the shuttle. As an example, we consider the force exerted on an endohedral N@C60 by the magnetic field gradient generated by a nearby nanomagnet. We derive a Hamiltonian for the full shuttle system which includes the metallic contacts, the spatially dependent tunnel couplings to the shuttle, the electronic and motional degrees of freedom of the shuttle itself and a coupling of the shuttle's motion to a phonon bath. We analyse the resulting quantum master equation and find that, due to the exponential dependence of the tunnel probability on the shuttle-contact separation, the current is highly sensitive to very small forces. In particular, we predict that the spin state of the endohedral electrons of NOC60 in a large magnetic gradient field can be distinguished from the resulting current signals within a few tens of nanoseconds. This effect could prove useful for the detection of the endohedral spin-state of individual paramagnetic molecules such as N@C60 and P@C60, or the detection of very small static forces acting on a C60 shuttle. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
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CITATION STYLE
Twamley, J., Utami, D. W., Goan, H. S., & Milburn, G. (2006). Spin-detection in a quantum electromechanical shuttle system. New Journal of Physics, 8. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/8/5/063
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