Abstract

We study the nonlinear steady-state transport of spinless fermions through a quantum dot with a local two-particle interaction. The dot degree of freedom is in addition coupled to a phonon mode. This setup combines the non-equilibrium physics of the interacting resonant level model and that of the Anderson-Holstein model. The fermion-fermion interaction defies a perturbative treatment. We mainly focus on the antiadiabatic limit, with the phonon frequency being larger than the lead-dot tunneling rate. In this regime also the fermion-boson coupling cannot be treated perturbatively. Our goal is two fold. We investigate the competing roles of the fermion-fermion and fermion-boson interactions on the emergent low-energy scale ${T}_{\mathrm{K}}$ and show how ${T}_{\mathrm{K}}$ manifests in the transport coefficients as well as the current-voltage characteristics. For small to intermediate interactions, the latter is in addition directly affected by both interactions independently. With increasing fermion-boson interaction the Franck-Condon blockade suppresses the current at small voltages and the emission of phonons leads to shoulders or steps at multiples of the phonon frequency, while the local fermion-fermion interaction implies a negative differential conductance at voltages larger than ${T}_{\mathrm{K}}$. We, in addition, use the model to investigate the limitations of our low-order truncated functional renormalization group approach on the Keldysh contour. In particular, we quantify the role of the broken current conservation.

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