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Phase-sensitive probes of nuclear polarization in spin-blockaded transport

M. S. Rudner, I. Neder, L. S. Levitov, and B. I. Halperin
Phys. Rev. B 82, 041311(R) – Published 29 July 2010

Abstract

Spin-blockaded quantum dots provide a unique setting for studying nuclear-spin dynamics in a nanoscale system. Despite recent experimental progress, observing phase-sensitive phenomena in nuclear spin dynamics remains challenging. Here we point out that such a possibility opens up in the regime where hyperfine exchange directly competes with a purely electronic spin-flip mechanism such as the spin-orbital interaction. Interference between the two spin-flip processes, resulting from long-lived coherence of the nuclear-spin bath, modulates the electron-spin-flip rate, making it sensitive to the transverse component of nuclear polarization. In a system repeatedly swept through a singlet-triplet avoided crossing, nuclear precession is manifested in oscillations and sign reversal of the nuclear-spin pumping rate as a function of the waiting time between sweeps. This constitutes a purely electrical method for the detection of coherent nuclear-spin dynamics.

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  • Received 2 June 2010

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.82.041311

©2010 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

M. S. Rudner1, I. Neder1, L. S. Levitov2, and B. I. Halperin1

  • 1Department of Physics, Harvard University, 17 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA
  • 2Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA

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Issue

Vol. 82, Iss. 4 — 15 July 2010

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