Electron transport in metallic grains

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Abstract

Nonequilibrium discuss electron transport in individual nanometer-scale metallic grains at dilution refrigerator temperatures. In the weak coupling regime, the grains exhibit Coulomb blockade and discrete energy levels. Electron-electron interactions lead to clustering and broadening of quasiparticle states. Magnetic field dependences of tunneling resonances directly reveal Kramers degeneracy and Lande g-factors. In grains of Au, which have strong spin-orbit interaction, g-factors are strongly suppressed from the free electron value. We have recently studied grains in the strong coupling regime. Coulomb blockade persists in this regime. It leads to a suppression in sample conductance at zero bias voltage at low temperatures. The effective charging energy strongly fluctuates with the applied magnetic field. We present evidence that the fluctuations are induced by electron spin. This paper reviews the evolving progress in interpreting these observations. © 2003 The Physical Society of Japan.

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Dayidoyić, D., Anaya, A., Korqtkov, A. L., Bowman, M., & Tinkham, M. (2003). Electron transport in metallic grains. In Journal of the Physical Society of Japan (Vol. 72, pp. 106–111). Physical Society of Japan. https://doi.org/10.1143/jpsjs.72sa.106

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