Quantumness of electron transport in quantum dot devices through Leggett-Garg inequalities: A non-equilibrium Green's function approach
Abstract: Although coherent manipulation of electronic states can be achieved in quantum dot (QD) devices by harnessing nanofabrication tools, it is often hard to fathom the extent to which these nanoelectronic devices can behave quantum mechanically. Witnessing their nonclassical nature would thus remain of paramount importance in the emerging world of quantum technologies, since the coherent dynamics of electronic states plays there a crucial role. Against this backdrop, we resort to the general framework of Leggett-Garg inequalities (LGI) as it allows for distinguishing the classical and quantum transport through nanostructures by way of various two-time correlation functions. Using the local charge detection at two different time, we investigate here theoretically whether any quantum violation of the original LGI exists with varying device configurations and parameters under both Markovian and non-Markovian dynamics. Two-time correlators within LGI are derived in terms of the non-equilibrium Green's functions (NEGFs) by exactly solving the quantum Langevin equations. The present study of non-Markovian dynamics of quantum systems interacting with reservoirs is significant for understanding the relaxation phenomenon in the ultrafast transient regime to especially mimic what happens to high-speed quantum devices. We can potentially capture the effect of finite reservoir correlation time by accounting for level broadening at the electrodes along with non-Markovian memory effects. Furthermore, the large bias restriction is no longer imposed in our calculations so that we can safely consider a finite bias between the electronic reservoirs. Our approach is likely to open up new possibilities of witnessing the quantumness for other quantum many-body systems as well that are driven out of the equilibrium.
- T. Brandes, Coherent and collective quantum optical effects in mesoscopic systems, physics reports 408, 315 (2005).
- A. J. Leggett and A. Garg, Quantum mechanics versus macroscopic realism: Is the flux there when nobody looks?, Physical Review Letters 54, 857 (1985).
- J. P. Paz and G. Mahler, Proposed test for temporal bell inequalities, Physical review letters 71, 3235 (1993).
- R. Ruskov, A. N. Korotkov, and A. Mizel, Signatures of quantum behavior in single-qubit weak measurements, Physical review letters 96, 200404 (2006).
- A. Souza, I. Oliveira, and R. Sarthour, A scattering quantum circuit for measuring bell’s time inequality: a nuclear magnetic resonance demonstration using maximally mixed states, New Journal of Physics 13, 053023 (2011).
- C. Emary, N. Lambert, and F. Nori, Leggett-garg inequality in electron interferometers, Physical Review B 86, 235447 (2012).
- C. Emary, N. Lambert, and F. Nori, Leggett–garg inequalities, Reports on Progress in Physics 77, 016001 (2014).
- T. Fritz, Quantum correlations in the temporal clauser–horne–shimony–holt (chsh) scenario, New Journal of Physics 12, 083055 (2010).
- P.-W. Chen and M. M. Ali, Investigating leggett-garg inequality for a two level system under decoherence in a non-markovian dephasing environment, Scientific reports 4, 6165 (2014).
- M. M. Ali and P.-W. Chen, Probing nonclassicality under dissipation, Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical 50, 435303 (2017).
- A. Santini and V. Vitale, Experimental violations of leggett-garg inequalities on a quantum computer, Physical Review A 105, 032610 (2022).
- Y. Suzuki, M. Iinuma, and H. F. Hofmann, Violation of leggett-garg inequalities in quantum measurements with variable resolution and back-action, New Journal of Physics 14, 103022 (2012).
- V. Athalye, S. S. Roy, and T. Mahesh, Investigation of the leggett-garg inequality for precessing nuclear spins, Physical review letters 107, 130402 (2011).
- N. Lambert, R. Johansson, and F. Nori, Macrorealism inequality for optoelectromechanical systems, Physical Review B 84, 245421 (2011).
- D. Gangopadhyay, D. Home, and A. S. Roy, Probing the leggett-garg inequality for oscillating neutral kaons and neutrinos, Physical Review A 88, 022115 (2013).
- C. R. Kagan and C. B. Murray, Charge transport in strongly coupled quantum dot solids, Nature nanotechnology 10, 1013 (2015).
- M. W. Tu and W.-M. Zhang, Non-markovian decoherence theory for a double-dot charge qubit, Physical Review B 78, 235311 (2008).
- H. Carmichael, Statistical methods in quantum optics 1: master equations and Fokker-Planck equations, Vol. 1 (Springer, Berlin, 1999).
- H.-P. Breuer and F. Petruccione, The theory of open quantum systems (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002).
- C. Gardiner and P. Zoller, Quantum noise: a handbook of Markovian and non-Markovian quantum stochastic methods with applications to quantum optics (Springer, Berlin, 2004).
- S. Gurvitz and Y. S. Prager, Microscopic derivation of rate equations for quantum transport, Physical Review B 53, 15932 (1996).
- S. Gurvitz, Rate equations for quantum transport in multidot systems, Physical Review B 57, 6602 (1998).
- A. N. Korotkov, Output spectrum of a detector measuring quantum oscillations, Physical Review B 63, 085312 (2001).
- N. S. Williams and A. N. Jordan, Weak values and the leggett-garg inequality in solid-state qubits, Physical review letters 100, 026804 (2008).
- L. V. Keldysh et al., Diagram technique for nonequilibrium processes, Sov. Phys. JETP 20, 1018 (1965).
- P.-Y. Yang, C.-Y. Lin, and W.-M. Zhang, Transient current-current correlations and noise spectra, Physical Review B 89, 115411 (2014).
- H. Haug and A.-P. Jauho, Quantum Kinetics in Transport and Optics of Semiconductors (Springer, Berlin, 1996).
- Y. Imry, Introduction to Mesoscopic Physics (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002).
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.