English

Interplay between interference and Coulomb interaction in the ferromagnetic Anderson model with applied magnetic field

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2009-03-05 v1

Abstract

We study the competition between interference due to multiple single-particle paths and Coulomb interaction in a simple model of an Anderson-like impurity with local-magnetic-field-induced level splitting coupled to ferromagnetic leads. The model along with its potential experimental relevance in the field of spintronics serves as a nontrivial benchmark system where various quantum transport approaches can be tested and compared. We present results for the linear conductance obtained by a spin-dependent implementation of the density matrix renormalization group scheme which are compared with a mean-field solution as well as a seemingly more advanced Hubbard-I approximation. We explain why mean-field yields nearly perfect results, while the more sophisticated Hubbard-I approach fails, even at a purely conceptual level since it breaks hermiticity of the related density matrix. Furthermore, we study finite bias transport through the impurity by the mean-field approach and recently developed higher-order density matrix equations. We find that the mean-field solution fails to describe the plausible results of the higher-order density matrix approach both quantitatively and qualitatively as it does not capture some essential features of the current-voltage characteristics such as negative differential conductance.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0810.5293,
  title  = {Interplay between interference and Coulomb interaction in the ferromagnetic Anderson model with applied magnetic field},
  author = {Jonas Nyvold Pedersen and Dan Bohr and Andreas Wacker and Tomas Novotny and Peter Schmitteckert and Karsten Flensberg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.5293},
  year   = {2009}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:36:13.162Z