Conductance reduction without shot noise in quantum wires
ORAL
Abstract
Shot noise can only be avoided in conductors without backscattering of conduction electrons. Such conductors without backscattering and a twofold spin-degeneracy have a minimal (nonzero) conductance of 2 $e^{2}/$h in the case of weak interactions. In recent experiments, however, also conductors with a reduced conductance of 1.4 $e^{2}/h$ have shown a clear tendency of noise suppression in zero magnetic field. It has been argued, that these experiments point to a lifted spin-degeneracy in these wires, spin-polarizing their conductance electrons. In this talk I will describe a model of an interacting quantum wire that is able to reproduce the transport behavior observed in these experiments qualitatively: that of the ``Coulomb Tonks gas'' of impenetrable electrons. It can be realized in ultra-thin wires, such as carbon nanotubes. We have studied transport through a finite-length Coulomb Tonks gas connected to bulk leads in various exactly solvable limits, both in and out of equilibrium. While we find a reduction of the conductance of such a wire to $e^{2}/h$ in all cases, the current in the wire does not exhibit any fluctuations at zero temperature. Most importantly, our model demonstrates that such noise suppression does not require a spin-polarization.
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