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An ultra-small Coulomb blockade device can be regarded as a mesoscopic artificial atom system and provides a rich experimental environment for studying quantum transport phenomena[1]. Previously, these quantum effects have been investigated using relatively large devices at ultra-low temperatures, where they give rise to a fine additional structure on the Coulomb oscillations [2-13]. Here, we report transport measurements carried out on a sub-2nm single-electron device; this size is sufficiently small that Coulomb blockade, and other quantum effects, persist up to room temperature (RT). These devices were made by scaling the size of a FinFET structure down to an ultimate limiting form, resulting in the reliable formation of a sub-2nm silicon Coulomb island. Four clear Coulomb diamonds can be observed at RT and the 2nd Coulomb diamond is unusually large, due to quantum confinement. The observed characteristics are successfully modeled on the basis of a very low electron number on the island, combined with Pauli spin exclusion. These effects offer additional functionality for future RT-operating single-electron device applications
We analyze the heat current flowing across interacting quantum dots within the Coulomb blockade regime. Power can be generated by either voltage or temperature biases. In the former case, we find nonlinear contributions to the Peltier effect that are
We report measurements of spin transitions for GaAs quantum dots in the Coulomb blockade regime, and compare ground and excited state transport spectroscopy to direct measurements of the spin polarization of emitted current. Transport spectroscopy re
Low-temperature transport properties of a lateral quantum dot formed by overlaying finger gates in a clean one-dimensional channel are investigated. Continuous and periodic oscillations superimposed upon ballistic conductance steps are observed, when
We report on depinning of nearly-commensurate charge-density waves in 1T-TaS2 thin-films at room temperature. A combination of the differential current-voltage measurements with the low-frequency noise spectroscopy provide unambiguous means for detec
Monolayers of molybdenum and tungsten dichalcogenides are direct bandgap semiconductors, which makes them promising for opto-electronic applications. In particular, van der Waals heterostructures consisting of monolayers of MoS2 sandwiched between at