4.6 Article

Coulomb oscillations in the electron thermal conductance of a dot in the linear regime

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 75, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.75.045344

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The electron thermal conductance, kappa, of a dot has been calculated in the regime of weak coupling with two electrode leads within a linear response theory. We discuss the effect of the interplay between the charging energy, the thermal energy, and the confinement in the Coulomb oscillations of kappa. Hence, we consider three energy regions: the quantum limit, where quantum confinement dominates over the thermal energy; the classical regime, where the discreteness of the energy spectrum is screened by the thermal energy; and the intermediate energy region. In the quantum limit, the periodicity of the oscillations of the electron thermal conductance is the same as the Coulomb-blockade oscillations of the conductance, G. Analytical expressions have been obtained for kappa and G in the cases of nondegenerate and for doubly degenerate energy spectrum. The obtained dependence of kappa on the energy level spacing and the thermal energy explicitly shows that quantum confinement is responsible for the fast decrease of the electron thermal conductance of a dot. It is found that degeneracies in the energy spectrum of a dot are opposed to the decrease of the electron thermal conduction due to quantum confinement. It is shown that an external field that raises the degeneracies causes a considerable enhancement in kappa. In the classical and in the intermediate regimes, the electron thermal conductance shows distinct behavior at low and high temperatures. In the classical regime, Coulomb blockade oscillations are shown at low temperatures and simple formulas are obtained for kappa and G. The Wiedermann-Franz law holds at the peaks of kappa and G. The temperature dependence of kappa and G has been calculated up to the limit where transport occurs through two isolated barriers. The relation between kappa and G with increasing thermal energy is discussed.

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