Tunable spin filter and molecular hybridization in a quantum dot molecule

ORAL

Abstract

Spin filtering using few electron semiconductor quantum dots formed in two-dimensional electron gas systems has attracted much recent attention in spintronics. Spin filtering has been achieved in a quantum dot via universal conductance fluctuations and electron magnetic focusing [1]. A bipolar spin filter (\textbf{SF}) has been realized recently using a semiconductor quantum dot which can operate practically as a perfect SF, provided there is a large enough Zeeman splitting [2]. In this work we present calculations showing that the tunable (molecular) hybridization between two quantum dots with few electrons and connected ``in parallel,'' produces a singlet-triplet transition in the ground state which can be used as a robust bipolar SF in both the linear and non-linear regimes of transport. The bipolar SF is found to be \textit{fully tunable by only electrical gating} at low temperatures. We show that a singlet-triplet transition in the energy spectrum gives rise to the natural spin selectivity in the odd-to-even electron number transition in Coulomb blockade experiments. The competition between the Zeeman, Coulomb, and tunneling energies is studied in detail to determine the optimal conditions to achieve the singlet-triplet transition, so that it becomes broadly useful as a bipolar SF. [1] J. A. Folk et al., Science \textbf{299}, 679 (2003). [2] R. Hanson et al., cond-mat/0311414 (2003). *Supported by DGAPA-UNAM project 1N114403, CONACYT, projects J40521F and 143673F, and NSF-IMC.

Authors

  • F. Mireles

  • Ernesto Cota

    • Centro de Ciencias de la Materia Condensada - UNAM
  • Fernando Rojas

    • Centro de Ciencias de la Materia Condensada(UNAM)
    • CCMC-UNAM, Ensenada BC, Mexico
  • Sergio Ulloa

    • Dept. of Physics \& Astron., and Nanoscale Quantum Phenomena Institute, Ohio University
    • Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Ohio Univ.
    • Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Ohio University
    • Ohio University, Athens, OH
    • Dept. of Physics and Astronomy and NQPI, Ohio Univ., Athens OH
    • Ohio University