Cavity-Enhanced Transport of Charge

David Hagenmüller, Johannes Schachenmayer, Stefan Schütz, Claudiu Genes, and Guido Pupillo
Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 223601 – Published 28 November 2017
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Abstract

We theoretically investigate charge transport through electronic bands of a mesoscopic one-dimensional system, where interband transitions are coupled to a confined cavity mode, initially prepared close to its vacuum. This coupling leads to light-matter hybridization where the dressed fermionic bands interact via absorption and emission of dressed cavity photons. Using a self-consistent nonequilibrium Green’s function method, we compute electronic transmissions and cavity photon spectra and demonstrate how light-matter coupling can lead to an enhancement of charge conductivity in the steady state. We find that depending on cavity loss rate, electronic bandwidth, and coupling strength, the dynamics involves either an individual or a collective response of Bloch states, and we explain how this affects the current enhancement. We show that the charge conductivity enhancement can reach orders of magnitudes under experimentally relevant conditions.

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  • Received 2 March 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.223601

© 2017 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Condensed Matter, Materials & Applied PhysicsAtomic, Molecular & Optical

Authors & Affiliations

David Hagenmüller1, Johannes Schachenmayer1, Stefan Schütz1, Claudiu Genes1,2, and Guido Pupillo1

  • 1IPCMS (UMR 7504) and ISIS (UMR 7006), University of Strasbourg and CNRS, 67000 Strasbourg, France
  • 2Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Staudtstraße 2, D-91058 Erlangen, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 119, Iss. 22 — 1 December 2017

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