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U. Mukhopadhyay

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Journal article (2022) - J. Knörzer, C. J. Van Diepen, T. K. Hsiao, G. Giedke, U. Mukhopadhyay, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, J. I. Cirac, L. M.K. Vandersypen
Long-range interactions play a key role in several phenomena of quantum physics and chemistry. To study these phenomena, analog quantum simulators provide an appealing alternative to classical numerical methods. Gate-defined quantum dots have been established as a platform for quantum simulation, but for those experiments the effect of long-range interactions between the electrons did not play a crucial role. Here we present a detailed experimental characterization of long-range electron-electron interactions in an array of gate-defined semiconductor quantum dots. We demonstrate significant interaction strength among electrons that are separated by up to four sites, and show that our theoretical prediction of the screening effects matches well the experimental results. Based on these findings, we investigate how long-range interactions in quantum dot arrays may be utilized for analog simulations of artificial quantum matter. We numerically show that about ten quantum dots are sufficient to observe binding for a one-dimensional H2-like molecule. These combined experimental and theoretical results pave the way for future quantum simulations with quantum dot arrays and benchmarks of numerical methods in quantum chemistry. ...
Journal article (2021) - C. J. Van Diepen, T. K. Hsiao, U. Mukhopadhyay, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, L. M.K. Vandersypen
Quantum-mechanical correlations of interacting fermions result in the emergence of exotic phases. Magnetic phases naturally arise in the Mott-insulator regime of the Fermi-Hubbard model, where charges are localized and the spin degree of freedom remains. In this regime, the occurrence of phenomena such as resonating valence bonds, frustrated magnetism, and spin liquids is predicted. Quantum systems with engineered Hamiltonians can be used as simulators of such spin physics to provide insights beyond the capabilities of analytical methods and classical computers. To be useful, methods for the preparation of intricate many-body spin states and access to relevant observables are required. Here, we show the quantum simulation of magnetism in the Mott-insulator regime with a linear quantum-dot array. We characterize the energy spectrum for a Heisenberg spin chain, from which we can identify when the conditions for homogeneous exchange couplings are met. Next, we study the multispin coherence with global exchange oscillations in both the singlet and triplet subspace of the Heisenberg Hamiltonian. Last, we adiabatically prepare the low-energy global singlet of the homogeneous spin chain and probe it with two-spin singlet-triplet measurements on each nearest-neighbor pair and the correlations therein. The methods and control presented here open new opportunities for the simulation of quantum magnetism benefiting from the flexibility in tuning and layout of gate-defined quantum-dot arrays. ...
Journal article (2021) - Cornelis J. van Diepen, Tzu Kan Hsiao, Uditendu Mukhopadhyay, Christian Reichl, Werner Wegscheider, Lieven M.K. Vandersypen
The spin of a single electron in a semiconductor quantum dot provides a well-controlled and long-lived qubit implementation. The electron charge in turn allows control of the position of individual electrons in a quantum dot array, and enables charge sensors to probe the charge configuration. Here we show that the Coulomb repulsion allows an initial charge transition to induce subsequent charge transitions, inducing a cascade of electron hops, like toppling dominoes. A cascade can transmit information along a quantum dot array over a distance that extends by far the effect of the direct Coulomb repulsion. We demonstrate that a cascade of electrons can be combined with Pauli spin blockade to read out distant spins and show results with potential for high fidelity using a remote charge sensor in a quadruple quantum dot device. We implement and analyse several operating modes for cascades and analyse their scaling behaviour. We also discuss the application of cascade-based spin readout to densely-packed two-dimensional quantum dot arrays with charge sensors placed at the periphery. The high connectivity of such arrays greatly improves the capabilities of quantum dot systems for quantum computation and simulation. ...
Journal article (2020) - T. K. Hsiao, C. J. Van Diepen, U. Mukhopadhyay, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, L. M.K. Vandersypen
Electrostatically-defined semiconductor quantum dot arrays offer a promising platform for quantum computation and quantum simulation. However, crosstalk of gate voltages to dot potentials and interdot tunnel couplings complicates the tuning of the device parameters. To date, crosstalk to the dot potentials is routinely and efficiently compensated using so-called virtual gates, which are specific linear combinations of physical gate voltages. However, due to exponential dependence of tunnel couplings on gate voltages, crosstalk to the tunnel barriers is currently compensated through a slow iterative process. In this work, we show that the crosstalk on tunnel barriers can be efficiently characterized and compensated for, using the fact that the same exponential dependence applies to all gates. We demonstrate efficient calibration of crosstalk in a quadruple quantum dot array and define a set of virtual barrier gates, with which we show orthogonal control of all interdot tunnel couplings. Our method marks a key step forward in the scalability of the tuning process of large-scale quantum dot arrays. ...
Journal article (2020) - J. P. Dehollain, U. Mukhopadhyay, V. P. Michal, Y. Wang, B. Wunsch, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, M. S. Rudner, E. Demler, L. M.K. Vandersypen
Engineered, highly controllable quantum systems are promising simulators of emergent physics beyond the simulation capabilities of classical computers1. An important problem in many-body physics is itinerant magnetism, which originates purely from long-range interactions of free electrons and whose existence in real systems has been debated for decades2,3. Here we use a quantum simulator consisting of a four-electron-site square plaquette of quantum dots4 to demonstrate Nagaoka ferromagnetism5. This form of itinerant magnetism has been rigorously studied theoretically6–9 but has remained unattainable in experiments. We load the plaquette with three electrons and demonstrate the predicted emergence of spontaneous ferromagnetic correlations through pairwise measurements of spin. We find that the ferromagnetic ground state is remarkably robust to engineered disorder in the on-site potentials and we can induce a transition to the low-spin state by changing the plaquette topology to an open chain. This demonstration of Nagaoka ferromagnetism highlights that quantum simulators can be used to study physical phenomena that have not yet been observed in any experimental system. The work also constitutes an important step towards large-scale quantum dot simulators of correlated electron systems. ...
Journal article (2019) - Anastasios Pateras, Jérôme Carnis, Paul G. Evans, Uditendu Mukhopadhyay, Marie Ingrid Richard, Steven J. Leake, Tobias U. Schülli, Christian Reichl, Werner Wegscheider, Juan Pablo Dehollain, Lieven M.K. Vandersypen
Increasing the number of quantum bits while preserving precise control of their quantum electronic properties is a significant challenge in materials design for the development of semiconductor quantum computing devices. Semiconductor heterostructures can host multiple quantum dots that are electrostatically defined by voltages applied to an array of metallic nanoelectrodes. The structural distortion of multiple-quantum-dot devices due to elastic stress associated with the electrodes has been difficult to predict because of the large micrometer-scale overall sizes of the devices, the complex spatial arrangement of the electrodes, and the sensitive dependence of the magnitude and spatial variation of the stress on processing conditions. Synchrotron X-ray nanobeam Bragg diffraction studies of a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure reveal the magnitude and nanoscale variation of these distortions. Investigations of individual linear electrodes reveal lattice tilts consistent with a 28-MPa compressive residual stress in the electrodes. The angular magnitude of the tilts varies by up to 20% over distances of less than 200 nm along the length of the electrodes, consistent with heterogeneity in the metal residual stress. A similar variation of the crystal tilt is observed in multiple-quantum-dot devices, due to a combination of the variation of the stress and the complex electrode arrangement. The heterogeneity in particular can lead to significant challenges in the scaling of multiple-quantum-dot devices due to differences between the charging energies of dots and uncertainty in the potential energy landscape. Alternatively, if incorporated in design, stress presents a new degree of freedom in device fabrication. ...
Journal article (2019) - Yao Wang, Juan Pablo Dehollain, Fang Liu, Uditendu Mukhopadhyay, Mark S. Rudner, Lieven M.K. Vandersypen, Eugene Demler
Recent progress of quantum simulators provides insight into the fundamental problems of strongly correlated systems. To adequately assess the accuracy of these simulators, the precise modeling of the many-body physics, with accurate model parameters, is crucially important. In this paper, we employed an ab initio exact diagonalization framework to compute the correlated physics of a few electrons in artificial potentials. We apply this approach to a quantum-dot system and study the magnetism of the correlated electrons, obtaining good agreement with recent experimental measurements in a plaquette. Through control of dot potentials and separation, including geometric manipulation of tunneling, we examine the Nagaoka transition and determine the robustness of the ferromagnetic state. While the Nagaoka theorem considers only a single-band Hubbard model, in this work we perform extensive ab initio calculations that include realistic multiorbital conditions in which the level splitting is smaller than the interactions. This simulation complements the experiments and provides insight into the formation of ferromagnetism in correlated systems. More generally, our calculation sets the stage for further theoretical analysis of analog quantum simulators at a quantitative level. ...
Doctoral thesis (2019) - Uditendu Mukhopadhyay, Lieven Vandersypen
We are entering the era of the second quantum revolution, where we aim to harness the power of quantum mechanics to create new technologies. Quantum technologies have the potential to revolutionize the fields of simulation, computation, communication, sensing, metrology, and many others. Here we discuss analog quantum simulation, which has attracted a lot of attention in the last few years from several platforms. Although arrays of gate-defined quantum dots exhibit significant potential for analog simulation, example experiments have been few and far between. This thesis focuses on simulating the Fermi-Hubbard model using two dimensional (2d) arrays of quantum dots.
The first experiment describes the creation and measurement of a 2x2 quantum dot array. Historically, most experiments with quantum dots have been performed with linear arrays due to the relative ease of fabrication. We introduce a bi-layer gate structure, facilitated by the lift-off of sputtered silicon nitride, to create the 2x2 dot array. This gate design enables us to achieve unprecedented tunability of the tunnel coupling between all nearest-neighbor pairs of dots in 2d arrays. We also demonstrate individual control over the chemical potential and the electron occupation of each dot along with accurate measurement of the on-site and inter-site interaction terms. The use of virtual gates significantly aids in the tuning of tunnel coupling and chemical potential. The demonstrated high degree of control of the system along with fast single-shot spin-readout achieved through Pauli spin blockade establish this dot array as a promising simulator of the Fermi-Hubbard model.
The 2x2 dot array is used to simulate Nagaoka ferromagnetism in the next experiment. This form of itinerant ferromagnetism arises from the Fermi-Hubbard model, and was first shown analytically in the limit of infinite interaction strengths and infinite lattices by Nagaoka in 1966. Nagaoka ferromagnetism has been a topic of rigorous theoretical studies ever since, but its experimental signature has eluded us for more than five decades. In this experiment, we load the four dot plaquette with three electrons and demonstrate the emergence of spontaneous ferromagnetism by measuring the spin correlation of two out of the three electrons. Changing the topology of the array to an open chain is shown to destroy the ferromagnetic signature, consistent with the Lieb-Mattis theorem. We also show indications that this ferromagnetic ground state can be destroyed by applying a perpendicular magnetic field, unlike most other forms of ferromagnetism. However, this ground state shows striking robustness to the offset in the local potential of any dot. This is the first experimental verification of Nagaoka’s prediction as well as the first simulation of magnetism using quantumdot arrays.
The final experiment takes a different approach to simulate the Fermi-Hubbardmodel with a large 2d array of quantum dots. The dot array is created using only three gates in a top-down approach. This allows for only global control over the electron filling and tunnel coupling of the dots, contrary to the previous experiments. The readout is performed with capacitance spectroscopy, which allows us to directly probe the density of states of the two-dimensional electron systems. We measure the disorder levels and optimize both substrates and gating strategies to induce periodic potential, sufficiently stronger than the disorder level, at the 2d electron gas. Although we demonstrate a novel platformfor the realization of artificial lattices of interacting particles, this effort is currently limited by the substrate inhomogeneity. ...
Electrostatically defined quantum dot arrays offer a compelling platform for quantum computation and simulation. However, tuning up such arrays with existing techniques becomes impractical when going beyond a handful of quantum dots. Here, we present a method for systematically adding quantum dots to an array one dot at a time, in such a way that the number of electrons on previously formed dots is unaffected. The method allows individual control of the number of electrons on each of the dots, as well as of the interdot tunnel rates. We use this technique to tune up a linear array of eight GaAs quantum dots such that they are occupied by one electron each. This new method overcomes a critical bottleneck in scaling up quantum-dot based qubit registers. ...
Journal article (2018) - Anastasios Pateras, Joonkyu Park, Lieven M.K. Vandersypen, Paul G. Evans, Youngjun Ahn, Jack A. Tilka, Martin V. Holt, Christian Reichl, Werner Wegscheider, Timothy A. Baart, Juan Pablo Dehollain, Uditendu Mukhopadhyay
Quantum devices formed in high-electron-mobility semiconductor heterostructures provide a route through which quantum mechanical effects can be exploited on length scales accessible to lithography and integrated electronics. The electrostatic definition of quantum dots in semiconductor heterostructure devices intrinsically involves the lithographic fabrication of intricate patterns of metallic electrodes. The formation of metal/semiconductor interfaces, growth processes associated with polycrystalline metallic layers, and differential thermal expansion produce elastic distortion in the active areas of quantum devices. Understanding and controlling these distortions present a significant challenge in quantum device development. We report synchrotron X-ray nanodiffraction measurements combined with dynamical X-ray diffraction modeling that reveal lattice tilts with a depth-averaged value up to 0.04° and strain on the order of 10-4 in the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) in a GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructure. Elastic distortions in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures modify the potential energy landscape in the 2DEG due to the generation of a deformation potential and an electric field through the piezoelectric effect. The stress induced by metal electrodes directly impacts the ability to control the positions of the potential minima where quantum dots form and the coupling between neighboring quantum dots. ...
Journal article (2018) - Uditendu Mukhopadhyay, Juan Pablo Dehollain, Christian Reichl, Werner Wegscheider, Lieven M.K. Vandersypen
The interaction between electrons in arrays of electrostatically defined quantum dots is naturally described by a Fermi-Hubbard Hamiltonian. Moreover, the high degree of tunability of these systems makes them a powerful platform to simulate different regimes of the Hubbard model. However, most quantum dot array implementations have been limited to one-dimensional linear arrays. In this letter, we present a square lattice unit cell of 2 × 2 quantum dots defined electrostatically in an AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructure using a double-layer gate technique. We probe the properties of the array using nearby quantum dots operated as charge sensors. We show that we can deterministically and dynamically control the charge occupation in each quantum dot in the single- to few-electron regime. Additionally, we achieve simultaneous individual control of the nearest-neighbor tunnel couplings over a range of 0-40 μeV. Finally, we demonstrate fast (∼1 μs) single-shot readout of the spin state of electrons in the dots through spin-to-charge conversion via Pauli spin blockade. These advances pave the way for analog quantum simulations in two dimensions, not previously accessible in quantum dot systems. ...
Journal article (2018) - C. J. Van Diepen, P. T. Eendebak, B. T. Buijtendorp, U. Mukhopadhyay, T. Fujita, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, L. M.K. Vandersypen
Semiconductor quantum dot arrays defined electrostatically in a 2D electron gas provide a scalable platform for quantum information processing and quantum simulations. For the operation of quantum dot arrays, appropriate voltages need to be applied to the gate electrodes that define the quantum dot potential landscape. Tuning the gate voltages has proven to be a time-consuming task, because of initial electrostatic disorder and capacitive cross-talk effects. Here, we report on the automated tuning of the inter-dot tunnel coupling in gate-defined semiconductor double quantum dots. The automation of the tuning of the inter-dot tunnel coupling is the next step forward in scalable and efficient control of larger quantum dot arrays. This work greatly reduces the effort of tuning semiconductor quantum dots for quantum information processing and quantum simulation. ...
Journal article (2018) - T. Hensgens, U. Mukhopadhyay, L. M.K. Vandersypen, P. Barthelemy, R. F.L. Vermeulen, R. N. Schouten, S. Fallahi, G. C. Gardner, C. Reichl, W. Wegscheider, M. J. Manfra
Electrostatic confinement in semiconductors provides a flexible platform for the emulation of interacting electrons in a two-dimensional lattice, including in the presence of gauge fields. This combination offers the potential to realize a wide host of quantum phases. Capacitance spectroscopy provides a technique that allows one to directly probe the density of states of such two-dimensional electron systems. Here, we present a measurement and fabrication scheme that builds on capacitance spectroscopy and allows for the independent control of density and periodic potential strength imposed on a two-dimensional electron gas. We characterize disorder levels and (in)homogeneity and develop and optimize different gating strategies at length scales where interactions are expected to be strong. A continuation of these ideas might see to fruition the emulation of interaction-driven Mott transitions or Hofstadter butterfly physics. ...