Abstract Thermoelectricity is generally understood as a classical effect emerging from energy-dependent transport asymmetries. Here, we uncover a purely quantum mechanism, where a superconducting S-I-S’ tunnel junction in thermal equilibrium develops a nonlinear bipolar thermoelectric response owing to the dynamical Coulomb blockade and the emission-absorption imbalance of a cold electromagnetic bath. Two representative environments are analysed, revealing Seebeck coefficients up to 100 μV/K for realistic junction parameters. Because the response directly reflects the spectral properties of the surrounding environment, our results suggest that bipolar quantum thermoelectricity could provide a new route for spectroscopic sensing of electromagnetic modes and for designing low-temperature thermoelectric devices with environmentally engineered performance.
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Antola et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7ef7bfa21ec5bbf07579 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-026-01237-8
F. Antola
Giorgio De Simoni
Francesco Giazotto
npj Quantum Information
Chapman University
Istituto Nanoscienze
National Enterprise for NanoScience and NanoTechnology
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