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Dive into the research topics where Enrique Colomés is active.

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Featured researches published by Enrique Colomés.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2015

Time-dependent exchange and tunneling: detection at the same place of two electrons emitted simultaneously from different sources

Damiano Marian; Enrique Colomés; X. Oriols

Two-particle scattering probabilities in tunneling scenarios with exchange interaction are analyzed with quasi-particle wave packets. Two initial one-particle wave packets (with opposite central momentums) are spatially localized at each side of a barrier. After impinging upon a tunneling barrier, each wave packet splits into transmitted and reflected components. When the initial two-particle anti-symmetrical state is defined as a Slater determinant of any type of (normalizable) one-particle wave packet, it is shown that the probability of detecting two (identically injected) electrons at the same side of the barrier is different from zero in very common (single or double barrier) scenarios. In some particular scenarios, the transmitted and reflected components become orthogonal and the mentioned probabilities reproduce those values associated to distinguishable particles. These unexpected non-zero probabilities are still present when non-separable Coulomb interaction or non-symmetrical potentials are considered. On the other hand, for initial wave packets close to Hamiltonian eigenstates, the usual zero two-particle probability for electrons at the same side of the barrier found in the literature is recovered. The generalization to many-particle scattering probabilities with quasi-particle wave packets for low and high phase-space density are also analyzed. The far-reaching consequences of these non-zero probabilities in the accurate evaluation of quantum noise in mesoscopic systems are briefly indicated.


Physical Review B | 2017

Quantum dissipation with conditional wave functions: Application to the realistic simulation of nanoscale electron devices

Enrique Colomés; Zhen Zhan; Damiano Marian; X. Oriols

Without access to the full quantum state, modelling dissipation in an open system requires approximations. The physical soundness of such approximations relies on using realistic microscopic models of dissipation that satisfy completely positive dynamical maps. Here we present an approach based on the use of the Bohmian conditional wave function that, by construction, ensures a completely positive dynamical map for either Markovian or non-Markovian scenarios, while allowing the implementation of realistic dissipation sources. Our approach is applied to compute the current-voltage characteristic of a resonant tunnelling device with a parabolic-band structure, including electron-lattice interactions. A stochastic Schrodinger equation is solved for the conditional wave function of each simulated electron. We also extend our approach to (graphene-like) materials with a linear band-structure using Bohmian conditional spinors for a stochastic Dirac equation.


Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment | 2016

Time-dependent simulation of particle and displacement currents in THz graphene transistors

Zhen Zhan; Enrique Colomés; A. Benali; Damiano Marian; X. Oriols

Although time-independent models provide very useful dynamical information with a reduced computational burden, going beyond the quasi-static approximation provides enriched information when dealing with terahertz (THz) frequencies. In this work, the THz noise of dual-gate graphene transistors with DC polarization is analyzed from a careful simulation of the time-dependent particle and displacement currents. From such currents, the power spectral density (PSD) of the total current fluctuations are computed at the source, drain and gate contacts. The role of the lateral dimensions of the transistors, the Klein tunneling and the positive–negative energy injection on the PSD are analyzed. Through the comparison of the PSD with and without band-to-band tunneling and graphene injection, it is shown that the unavoidable Klein tunneling and positive–negative energy injection in graphene structures imply an increment of noise without similar increment on the current, degrading the (either low or high frequency) signal-to-noise ratio. Finally, it is shown that the shorter the vertical height (in comparison with the length of the active region in the transport direction), the larger the maximum frequency of the PSD. As a byproduct of this result, an alternative strategy (without length scaling) to optimize the intrinsic cut-off frequency of graphene transistors is envisioned.


international workshop on computational electronics | 2015

Dissipative quantum transport using one-particle time-dependent (conditional) wave functions

X. Oriols; Zhen Zhan; Enrique Colomés; Damiano Marian

An effective single-particle Schrodinger equation to include dissipation into quantum devices is presented. This effective equation is fully understood in the context of Bohmian mechanics, a theory of particles and waves, where it is possible to define unambiguously the wave function of a subsystem, the so-called conditional wave function. In particular the change in energy and momentum of an electron when interacting with a phonon is presented, both theoretically and numerically. This work is a first step to include dissipation into the fully-quantum simulator BITLLES.


Journal of Computational Electronics | 2016

Unphysical features in the application of the Boltzmann collision operator in the time-dependent modeling of quantum transport

Zhen Zhan; Enrique Colomés; X. Oriols

In this work, the use of the Boltzmann collision operator for dissipative quantum transport is analyzed. Its mathematical role on the description of the time-evolution of the density matrix during a collision can be understood as processes of adding and subtracting states. We show that unphysical results can be present in quantum simulations when the old states (that built the density matrix associated to an open system before the collision) are different from the additional states generated by the Boltzmann collision operator. As a consequence of the Fermi Golden rule, the new generated sates are usually eigenstates of the momentum or kinetic energy. Then, negative values of the charge density may appear after the collision. This fact is originated by the different time-evolutions of the old and new states. This unphysical feature disappears when the Boltzmann collision operator generates states that were already present in the density matrix of the quantum system before the collision. Following these ideas, in this paper, we introduce an algorithm that models phonon–electron interactions through the Boltzmann collision operator without negative values of the charge density. The model only requires the exact knowledge, at all times, of the states that build the density matrix of the open system.


Journal of Computational Electronics | 2015

Comparing Wigner, Husimi and Bohmian distributions: which one is a true probability distribution in phase space?

Enrique Colomés; Zhen Zhan; X. Oriols

The Wigner distribution function is a quasi-probability distribution. When properly integrated, it provides the correct charge and current densities, but it gives negative probabilities in some points and regions of the phase space. Alternatively, the Husimi distribution function is positive-defined everywhere, but it does not provide the correct charge and current densities. The origin of all these difficulties is the attempt to construct a phase space within a quantum theory that does not allow well-defined (i.e. simultaneous) values of the position and momentum of an electron. In contrast, within the (de Broglie–Bohm) Bohmian theory of quantum mechanics, an electron has well-defined position and momentum. Therefore, such theory provides a natural definition of the phase space probability distribution and by construction, it is positive-defined and it exactly reproduces the charge and current densities. The Bohmian distribution function has many potentialities for quantum problems, in general, and for quantum transport, in particular, that remains unexplored.


Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment | 2016

Quantum noise with exchange and tunnelling: predictions for a two-particle scattering experiment with time-dependent oscillatory potentials

Enrique Colomés; Damiano Marian; X. Oriols

Quantum noise with exchange and tunnelling is studied within time-dependent wave packets. A novel expression for the quantum noise of two identical particles injected simultaneously from opposite sides of a tunnelling barrier is presented. Such quantum noise expression provides a physical (non-spurious) explanation for the experimental detection of two electrons at the same side under static potentials. Numerical simulations of the two-particle scattering probabilities in a double barrier potential with an oscillatory well are performed. The dependence of the quantum noise on the electron energy and oscillatory frequency is analysed. The peculiar behaviour of the dependence of the quantum noise on such parameters is proposed as a test about the soundness of this novel quantum noise expression, for either static or oscillatory potentials.


Fluctuation and Noise Letters | 2016

Noise in Quantum Devices: A Unified Computational Approach for Different Scattering Mechanisms

Damiano Marian; Enrique Colomés

When talking about noise in quantum devices two issues must be faced: how to model the evolution of an electronic system with scattering and how this noise is practically computed in a quantum device simulator. In the present paper, we address both problems from a practical and computational point of view. In particular, as the electronic quantum subsystem is an open (normally far from equilibrium) system, we use the notion of conditional wave function, the wave function of a subsystem in Bohmian mechanics, an alternative version of quantum mechanics which along with the wave function posited definite positions for the particles. This allows us to define an effective equation in several physical situations, ranging from the simple tunneling barrier to the interaction with a bath of phonons. Finally, we present how this development can be used to compute quantum noise in a quantum device simulator.


Semiconductor Science and Technology | 2018

Implications of the Klein tunneling times on high frequency graphene devices using Bohmian trajectories

Devashish Pandey; Matteo Villani; Enrique Colomés; Zhen Zhan; X. Oriols

Because of its large Fermi velocity, leading to a great mobility, graphene is expected to play an important role in (small signal) radio frequency electronics. Among other, graphene devices based on Klein tunneling phenomena are already envisioned. The connection between the Klein tunneling times of electrons and cut-off frequencies of graphene devices is not obvious. We argue in this paper that the trajectory-based Bohmian approach gives a very natural framework to quantify Klein tunneling times in linear band graphene devices because of its ability to distinguish, not only between transmitted and reflected electrons, but also between reflected electrons that spend time in the barrier and those that do not. Without such distinction, typical expressions found in the literature to compute dwell times can give unphysical results when applied to predict cut-off frequencies. In particular, we study Klein tunneling times for electrons in a two-terminal graphene device constituted by a potential barrier between two metallic contacts. We show that for a zero incident angle (and positive or negative kinetic energy), the transmission coefficient is equal to one, and the dwell time is roughly equal to the barrier distance divided by the Fermi velocity. For electrons incident with a non-zero angle smaller than the critical angle, the transmission coefficient decreases and dwell time can still be easily predicted in the Bohmian framework. The main conclusion of this work is that, contrary to tunneling devices with parabolic bands, the high graphene mobility is roughly independent of the presence of Klein tunneling phenomena in the active device region.


international workshop on computational electronics | 2015

Reformulation of quantum noise: when indistinguishable becomes distinguishable?

Enrique Colomés; Damiano Marian; X. Oriols

In this work, quantum noise is reformulated taking into account the finite size of (normalizable) wave functions associated to electrons. We consider two-particle scattering with tunneling and exchange. This reformulation provides a richer phenomenology compared to timeindependent approaches, such as the Landauer-Buttiker formalism. It is proved that, depending on the scenario, the noise associated to identical electrons may behave as the one for distinguishable particles. In addition, it is showed that new contributions to the quantum noise appear.

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X. Oriols

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Damiano Marian

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Zhen Zhan

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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A. Benali

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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