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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Nonlinear thermovoltage and thermocurrent in quantum dots

Phillip M. WuHongqi XuHenrik NilssonE. A. HoffmannNatthapon NakpathomkunDavid SánchezSofia Fahlvik SvenssonVyacheslavs KashcheyevsHeiner Linke

subject

PhysicsCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsCondensed matter physicsNanowireMeasure (physics)FOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and Astronomyddc:RenormalizationCondensed Matter::Materials ScienceNonlinear systemQuantum dotSeebeck coefficientMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)Thermoelectric effectCondensed Matter::Strongly Correlated ElectronsQuantum

description

Quantum dots are model systems for quantum thermoelectric behavior because of their ability to control and measure the effects of electron-energy filtering and quantum confinement on thermoelectric properties. Interestingly, nonlinear thermoelectric properties of such small systems can modify the efficiency of thermoelectric power conversion. Using quantum dots embedded in semiconductor nanowires, we measure thermovoltage and thermocurrent that are strongly nonlinear in the applied thermal bias. We show that most of the observed nonlinear effects can be understood in terms of a renormalization of the quantum-dot energy levels as a function of applied thermal bias and provide a theoretical model of the nonlinear thermovoltage taking renormalization into account. Furthermore, we propose a theory that explains a possible source of the observed, pronounced renormalization effect by the melting of Kondo correlations in the mixed-valence regime. The ability to control nonlinear thermoelectric behavior expands the range in which quantum thermoelectric effects may be used for efficient energy conversion. © IOP Publishing and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.

https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/15/10/105011