Effects of disorder and interactions on environment assisted quantum transport
Abstract: Understanding the interplay between disorder, environment and interactions is key to elucidating the transport properties of open quantum systems, from excitons in photosynthetic networks to qubits in ion traps. This interplay is studied here theoretically in the context of environment-assisted quantum transport (ENAQT), a unique situation in open system where an environment-induced dephasing can, counter-intuitively, enhance transport. First, we show a surprising situation where the particle current grows with increasing disorder, even without dephasing. Then, we suggest a specific mechanism for ENAQT (which we dub population uniformization) and demonstrate that it can explain the persistence of ENAQT deep into the disorder-induced localization regime. Finally, we show that repulsive interactions are detrimental to ENAQT, and lead to an environment-hampered quantum transport. Our predictions can readily be tested within the scope of particle current experimental capabilities.
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