Abhay Shastry
University of Arizona
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Publication
Featured researches published by Abhay Shastry.
Physical Review B | 2016
Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford
We show that a local measurement of temperature and voltage for a quantum system in steady state, arbitrarily far from equilibrium, with arbitrary interactions within the system, is unique when it exists. This is interpreted as a consequence of the second law of thermodynamics. We further derive a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of a solution. In this regard, we find that a positive temperature solution exists whenever there is no net population inversion. However, when there is a net population inversion, we may characterize the system with a unique negative temperature. Voltage and temperature measurements are treated on an equal footing: They are simultaneously measured in a noninvasive manner, via a weakly-coupled thermoelectric probe, defined by requiring vanishing charge and heat dissipation into the probe. Our results strongly suggest that a local temperature measurement without a simultaneous local voltage measurement, or vice-versa, is a misleading characterization of the state of a nonequilibrium quantum electron system. These results provide a firm mathematical foundation for voltage and temperature measurements far from equilibrium.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017
C. A. Stafford; Abhay Shastry
The local entropy of a nonequilibrium system of independent fermions is investigated and analyzed in the context of the laws of thermodynamics. It is shown that the local temperature and chemical potential can only be expressed in terms of derivatives of the local entropy for linear deviations from local equilibrium. The first law of thermodynamics is shown to lead to an inequality, not equality, for the change in the local entropy as the nonequilibrium state of the system is changed. The maximum entropy principle (second law of thermodynamics) is proven: a nonequilibrium distribution has a local entropy less than or equal to a local equilibrium distribution satisfying the same constraints. It is shown that the local entropy of the system tends to zero when the local temperature tends to zero, consistent with the third law of thermodynamics.
Physical Review B | 2015
Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford
We consider a question motivated by the third law of thermodynamics: can there be a local temperature arbitrarily close to absolute zero in a nonequilibrium quantum system? We consider nanoscale quantum conductors with the source reservoir held at finite temperature and the drain held at or near absolute zero, a problem outside the scope of linear response theory. We obtain local temperatures close to absolute zero when electrons originating from the finite temperature reservoir undergo destructive quantum interference. The local temperature is computed by numerically solving a nonlinear system of equations describing equilibration of a scanning thermoelectric probe with the system, and we obtain excellent agreement with analytic results derived using the Sommerfeld expansion. A local entropy for a nonequilibrium quantum system is introduced, and used as a metric quantifying the departure from local equilibrium. It is shown that the local entropy of the system tends to zero when the probe temperature tends to zero, consistent with the third law of thermodynamics.
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Marco Antonio Jimenez Valencia; Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
C. A. Stafford; Abhay Shastry
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Abhay Shastry; Marcus Rosales; C. A. Stafford
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Abhay Shastry; Sosuke Inui; C. A. Stafford
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Yiheng Xu; Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Abhay Shastry; C. A. Stafford