Аннотация:
We overview transport properties of an Aharonov–Bohm interferometer
made of a single-channel quantum ring. Remarkably, in this setup, essentially
quantum effects survive thermal averaging: the high-temperature tunneling
conductance $G$ of a ring shows sharp dips (antiresonances) as a function of
magnetic flux.
We discuss effects of electron-electron interaction, disorder, and spin-orbit
coupling on the Aharonov–Bohm transport through the ring. The interaction
splits the dip into series of dips broadened by dephasing. The physics
behind this behavior is the persistent-current-blockade: the current through
the ring is blocked by the circular current inside the ring. Dephasing is
then dominated by tunneling-induced fluctuations of the circular current. The
short-range disorder broadens antiresonances, while the long-range one
induces additional dips. In the presence of a spin-orbit coupling, $G$
exhibits two types of sharp antiresonances: Aharonov–Bohm and Aharonov-Casher
ones. In the vicinity of the antiresonances, the tunneling electrons acquire
spin polarization, so that the ring serves as a spin polarizer.