Condensed Matter Seminar Series
Title: Resistivity of inhomogeneous quantum wires
Konstantin Matveev
Argonne National Lab
Thursday October 30, 11 am, Room 298, Physics Building
We study the
transport properties of a long non-uniform quantum wire where the
electron-electron interactions and the density vary smoothly at large
length scales. We show that these inhomogeneities lead to a finite
resistivity of the wire, due to a weak violation of momentum
conservation in the collisions between electrons. Estimating the rate
of change of momentum associated with non-momentum-conserving
scattering processes, we derive the expression for the resistivity of
the wire in the regime of weakly interacting electrons and find a
contribution linear in temperature for a broad range of temperatures
below the Fermi energy. By estimating the energy dissipated throughout
the wire by low-energy excitations, we then develop a different method
for deriving the resistivity of the wire, which can be combined with
the bosonization formalism. This allows us to compare our results with
previous works relying on an extension of the Tomonaga-Luttinger model
to inhomogeneous systems.
Host: Stephen Teitsworth