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Low-control and robust quantum refrigerator and applications with electronic spins in diamond

  • M. Hamed Mohammady
  • , Hyeongrak Choi
  • , Matthew E. Trusheim
  • , Abolfazl Bayat
  • , Dirk Englund
  • , Yasser Omar
  • Instituto de Telecomunicações
  • University of Exeter
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
  • University College London
  • University of Lisbon

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

We propose a general protocol for low-control refrigeration and thermometry of thermal qubits, which can be implemented using electronic spins in diamond. The refrigeration is implemented by a probe, consisting of a network of interacting spins. The protocol involves two operations: (i) free evolution of the probe; and (ii) a swap gate between one spin in the probe and the thermal qubit we wish to cool. We show that if the initial state of the probe falls within a suitable range, and the free evolution of the probe is both unital and conserves the excitation in the z direction, then the cooling protocol will always succeed, with an efficiency that depends on the rate of spin dephasing and the swap-gate fidelity. Furthermore, measuring the probe after it has cooled many qubits provides an estimate of their temperature. We provide a specific example where the probe is a Heisenberg spin chain, and suggest a physical implementation using electronic spins in diamond. Here, the probe is constituted of nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers, while the thermal qubits are dark spins. By using a novel pulse sequence, a chain of NV centers can be made to evolve according to a Heisenberg Hamiltonian. This proposal allows for a range of applications, such as NV-based nuclear magnetic resonance of photosensitive molecules kept in a dark spot on a sample, and it opens up possibilities for the study of quantum thermodynamics, environment-assisted sensing, and many-body physics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number042124
JournalPhysical Review A
Volume97
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 25 2018

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