6533b853fe1ef96bd12ad5ed

RESEARCH PRODUCT

A many-body approach to transport in quantum systems : From the transient regime to the stationary state

M RidleyN W TalaricoD KarlssonN Lo GulloR Tuovinen

subject

Statistics and ProbabilityTIME-DEPENDENT TRANSPORTKADANOFF-BAYM EQUATIONSGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesnon-equilibrium Green's functionGREENS-FUNCTIONDENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORYCondensed Matter - Strongly Correlated ElectronsPhysics - Chemical PhysicsMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)COHERENT TRANSPORTSINGLE-MOLECULEkvanttifysiikkamany-body correlationMathematical Physicsquantum transportMEAN-FIELD THEORYChemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)Quantum PhysicsANDERSON-HOLSTEIN MODELCondensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsStrongly Correlated Electrons (cond-mat.str-el)Statistical and Nonlinear PhysicsCHARGE MIGRATIONModeling and Simulationnon-equilibrium Green’s functionQuantum Physics (quant-ph)SHOT-NOISE

description

We review one of the most versatile theoretical approaches to the study of time-dependent correlated quantum transport in nano-systems: the non-equilibrium Green's function (NEGF) formalism. Within this formalism, one can treat, on the same footing, inter-particle interactions, external drives and/or perturbations, and coupling to baths with a (piece-wise) continuum set of degrees of freedom. After a historical overview on the theory of transport in quantum systems, we present a modern introduction of the NEGF approach to quantum transport. We discuss the inclusion of inter-particle interactions using diagrammatic techniques, and the use of the so-called embedding and inbedding techniques which take the bath couplings into account non-perturbatively. In various limits, such as the non-interacting limit and the steady-state limit, we then show how the NEGF formalism elegantly reduces to well-known formulae in quantum transport as special cases. We then discuss non-equilibrium transport in general, for both particle and energy currents. Under the presence of a time-dependent drive - encompassing pump-probe scenarios as well as driven quantum systems - we discuss the transient as well as asymptotic behavior, and also how to use NEGF to infer information on the out-of-equilibrium system. As illustrative examples, we consider model systems general enough to pave the way to realistic systems. These examples encompass one- and two-dimensional electronic systems, systems with electron-phonon couplings, topological superconductors, and optically responsive molecular junctions where electron-photon couplings are relevant.

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202207013757