Abstract

We study the steady-state dc transport characteristics of a system comprised of an interacting quantum dot, modelled as an Anderson impurity, coupled to two metallic non-interacting leads with Rashba SOC, using an interpolative perturbative approach (IPA). The single-particle spectra, current and differential conductance are obtained in weak and strong coupling regimes over a wide range of SOC and bias values. Extensive benchmarking of the IPA validates the method in the linear as well as non-linear response regime. The universal, zero bias ($V_{sd}=0$) peak with a width proportional to the Kondo scale ($T_K$) and two non-universal finite bias peaks around $V_{sd}=\pm U$ in the zero temperature differential conductance show a clear separation with increasing $U$ or increasing SOC. In the strong coupling regime, increasing temperature induces melting of the zero bias peak leading to a crossover from a three-peak conductance to a two-peak conductance. Recent experiments find the emergence of a two-peak structure by increasing SOC at a fixed temperature. Our results appear to provide a qualitative explanation of these observations as a SOC tuned crossover from weak/intermediate to strong coupling, and a simultaneous crossover from low $T/T_K$ to high $T/T_K$ ratio. We also reproduce the experimentally observed temperature dependence of the zero bias conductance.

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