François Parmentier
École Normale Supérieure
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Featured researches published by François Parmentier.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Matthieu R. Delbecq; Vivien Schmitt; François Parmentier; Nicolas Roch; Jeremie Viennot; Gwendal Fève; Benjamin Huard; Christophe Mora; Audrey Cottet; Takis Kontos
We demonstrate a hybrid architecture consisting of a quantum dot circuit coupled to a single mode of the electromagnetic field. We use single wall carbon nanotube based circuits inserted in superconducting microwave cavities. By probing the nanotube dot using a dispersive readout in the Coulomb blockade and the Kondo regime, we determine an electron-photon coupling strength which should enable circuit QED experiments with more complex quantum dot circuits.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Erwann Bocquillon; François Parmentier; Charles Grenier; Jean-Marc Berroir; Pascal Degiovanni; D. C. Glattli; B. Plaçais; A. Cavanna; Y. Jin; Gwendal Fève
We have realized a quantum optics like Hanbury Brown-Twiss (HBT) experiment by partitioning, on an electronic beam splitter, single elementary electronic excitations produced one by one by an on-demand emitter. We show that the measurement of the output currents correlations in the HBT geometry provides a direct counting, at the single charge level, of the elementary excitations (electron-hole pairs) generated by the emitter at each cycle. We observe the antibunching of low energy excitations emitted by the source with thermal excitations of the Fermi sea already present in the input leads of the splitter, which suppresses their contribution to the partition noise. This effect is used to probe the energy distribution of the emitted wave packets.
Annalen der Physik | 2014
Erwann Bocquillon; Vincent Freulon; François Parmentier; Jean-Marc Berroir; B. Plaçais; C. Wahl; Jérôme Rech; T. Jonckheere; Thierry Martin; Charles Grenier; Dario Ferraro; Pascal Degiovanni; Gwendal Fève
The edge channels of the quantum Hall effect provide one dimensional chiral and ballistic wires along which electrons can be guided in an optics-like setup. Electronic propagation can then be analyzed using concepts and tools derived from optics. After a brief review of electron optics experiments performed using stationary current sources which continuously emit electrons in the conductor, this paper focuses on triggered sources, which can generate on-demand a single particle state. It first outlines the electron optics formalism and its analogies and differences with photon optics and then turns to the presentation of single electron emitters and their characterization through the measurements of the average electrical current and its correlations. This is followed by a discussion of electron quantum optics experiments in the Hanbury-Brown and Twiss geometry where two-particle interferences occur. Finally, Coulomb interactions effects and their influence on single electron states are considered.
Physical Review B | 2012
François Parmentier; Erwann Bocquillon; Jean-Marc Berroir; D. C. Glattli; B. Plaçais; Gwendal Fève; Mathias Albert; Christian Flindt; Markus Buttiker
The controlled and accurate emission of coherent electronic wave packets is of prime importance for future applications of nano-scale electronics. Here we present a theoretical and experimental analysis of the finite-frequency noise spectrum of a periodically driven single electron emitter. The electron source consists of a mesoscopic capacitor that emits single electrons and holes into a chiral edge state of a quantum Hall sample. We compare experimental results with two complementary theoretical descriptions: On one hand, the Floquet scattering theory which leads to accurate numerical results for the noise spectrum under all relevant operating conditions. On the other hand, a semi-classical model which enables us to develop an analytic description of the main sources of noise when the emitter is operated under optimal conditions. We find excellent agreement between experiment and theory. Importantly, the noise spectrum provides us with an accurate description and characterization of the mesoscopic capacitor when operated as a periodic single electron emitter.
New Journal of Physics | 2011
Charles Grenier; Rémy Hervé; Erwann Bocquillon; François Parmentier; B. Plaçais; Jean-Marc Berroir; Gwendal Fève; Pascal Degiovanni
Electron quantum optics aims at the controlled manipulation and measurement of the quantum state of a single to few electrons in metallic nanostructures comparable to recent achievements with microwave photons, light or cold atoms. Mach-Zenhder interference experiments in integer quantum Hall edge channels as well as the demonstration of an on-demand single electron source have risen the hope for electron quantum optics experiments in ballistic conductors. However the wavefunction of a coherent single electron excitation has never been imaged. Here, we propose a quantum tomography protocol to measure single electron coherence in quantum Hall edge channels analogous to homodyne tomography in quantum optics. Single electron quantum tomography would be a major step in electron quantum optics with applications ranging from characterization of single to few electron sources to quantitative studies of single electron decoherence in nanostructures. We discuss how this proposal could be implemented using recently developed ultrahigh sensitivity noise measurement schemes.
Nature | 2015
Z. Iftikhar; Sébastien Jezouin; A. Anthore; U. Gennser; François Parmentier; A. Cavanna; F. Pierre
Many-body correlations and macroscopic quantum behaviours are fascinating condensed matter problems. A powerful test-bed for the many-body concepts and methods is the Kondo effect, which entails the coupling of a quantum impurity to a continuum of states. It is central in highly correlated systems and can be explored with tunable nanostructures. Although Kondo physics is usually associated with the hybridization of itinerant electrons with microscopic magnetic moments, theory predicts that it can arise whenever degenerate quantum states are coupled to a continuum. Here we demonstrate the previously elusive ‘charge’ Kondo effect in a hybrid metal–semiconductor implementation of a single-electron transistor, with a quantum pseudospin of 1/2 constituted by two degenerate macroscopic charge states of a metallic island. In contrast to other Kondo nanostructures, each conduction channel connecting the island to an electrode constitutes a distinct and fully tunable Kondo channel, thereby providing unprecedented access to the two-channel Kondo effect and a clear path to multi-channel Kondo physics. Using a weakly coupled probe, we find the renormalization flow, as temperature is reduced, of two Kondo channels competing to screen the charge pseudospin. This provides a direct view of how the predicted quantum phase transition develops across the symmetric quantum critical point. Detuning the pseudospin away from degeneracy, we demonstrate, on a fully characterized device, quantitative agreement with the predictions for the finite-temperature crossover from quantum criticality.
Journal of Low Temperature Physics | 2008
Adrien Mahé; François Parmentier; Gwendal Fève; Jean-Marc Berroir; Takis Kontos; A. Cavanna; B. Etienne; Y. Jin; D. C. Glattli; B. Plaçais
We describe here the realization of a single electron source similar to single photon sources in optics. On-demand single electron injection is obtained using a quantum dot connected to the conductor via a tunnel barrier of variable transmission (quantum point contact). Electron emission is triggered by a sudden change of the dot potential which brings a single energy level above the Fermi energy in the conductor. A single charge is emitted on an average time ranging from 100 ps to 10 ns ultimately determined by the barrier transparency and the dot charging energy. The average single electron emission process is recorded with a 0.5 ns time resolution using a real-time fast acquisition card. Single electron signals are compared to simulation based on scattering theory approach adapted for finite excitation energies.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2011
François Parmentier; Adrien Mahé; Anne Denis; Jean-Marc Berroir; D. C. Glattli; B. Plaçais; Gwendal Fève
We report on the realization of a high sensitivity RF noise measurement scheme to study small current fluctuations of mesoscopic systems at milli-Kelvin temperatures. The setup relies on the combination of an interferometric amplification scheme and a quarter-wave impedance transformer, allowing the measurement of noise power spectral densities with gigahertz bandwidth up to five orders of magnitude below the amplifier noise floor. We simultaneously measure the high frequency conductance of the sample by derivating a portion of the signal to a microwave homodyne detection. We describe the principle of the setup, as well as its implementation and calibration. Finally, we show that our setup allows to fully characterize a subnanosecond on-demand single electron source. More generally, its sensitivity and bandwidth make it suitable for applications manipulating single charges at GHz frequencies.
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Minky Seo; Preden Roulleau; P. Roche; D. Christian Glattli; M. Sanquer; X. Jehl; Louis Hutin; Sylvain Barraud; François Parmentier
Quantum shot noise probes the dynamics of charge transfers through a quantum conductor, reflecting whether quasiparticles flow across the conductor in a steady stream, or in syncopated bursts. We have performed high-sensitivity shot noise measurements in a quantum dot obtained in a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor. The quality of our device allows us to precisely associate the different transport regimes and their statistics with the internal state of the quantum dot. In particular, we report on large current fluctuations in the inelastic cotunneling regime, corresponding to different highly correlated, non-Markovian charge transfer processes. We have also observed unusually large current fluctuations at low energy in the elastic cotunneling regime, the origin of which remains to be fully investigated.Quantum shot noise probes the dynamics of charge transfers through a quantum conductor, reflecting whether quasiparticles flow across the conductor in a steady stream, or in syncopated bursts. We have performed high-sensitivity shot noise measurements in a quantum dot obtained in a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor. The quality of our device allows us to precisely associate the different transport regimes and their statistics with the internal state of the quantum dot. In particular, we report on large current fluctuations in the inelastic cotunneling regime, corresponding to different highly-correlated, non-Markovian charge transfer processes. We have also observed unusually large current fluctuations at low energy in the elastic cotunneling regime, the origin of which remains to be fully investigated.
international conference on noise and fluctuations | 2011
François Parmentier; Erwann Bocquillon; Adrien Mahé; Jean-Marc Berroir; D. C. Glattli; B. Plaçais; Gwendal Fève; A. Cavanna; Y. Jin
We present here the experimental study of the short time correlations of the current fluctuations generated by a periodic single electron emitter. The electron emitter is a mesoscopic capacitor, a top gated quantum dot connected to a conductor via a tunable tunnel barrier. We observe a new fundamental noise for electrons which is associated with the quantum fluctuations of the electron emission time from one emission cycle to the other. This random jitter between the emission trigger and the single particle emission is related to the random nature of single particle tunneling and is intrinsic to any single particle emitter. When the emitter emits a single particle at each cycle with unit probability, the noise reduces to this fundamental jitter limit which demonstrates single particle emission.