Abstract
We present a detailed study of the surface acoustic wave mediated quantized transport of electrons through a split-gate device containing an impurity potential defined quantum dot within the split-gate channel. A regime of quantized transport is observed at low rf powers where the surface acoustic wave amplitude is comparable to the quantum dot charging energy. In this regime resonant transport through the single-electron dot state occurs which we interpret as turnstile-like operation in which the traveling wave amplitude modulates the entrance and exit barriers of the quantum dot in a cyclic fashion at GHz frequencies. For high rf powers, where the amplitude of the surface acoustic wave is much larger than the quantum dot energies, the quantized acoustoelectric current transport shows behavior consistent with previously reported results. However, in this regime, the number of quantized current plateaus observed and the plateau widths are determined by the properties of the quantum dot, demonstrating that the microscopic detail of the potential landscape in the split-gate channel has a profound influence on the quantized acoustoelectric current transport.
- Received 20 August 2003
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.68.245310
©2003 American Physical Society