Microscopic design of a topologically protected singlet-triplet qubit in an InAsP quantum dot array

Abstract

We present here the steps enabling the microscopic design of a topologically protected singlet-triplet qubit in an InAsP quantum dot array embedded in an InP nanowire. The qubit is constructed with two Haldane spin-12 quasiparticles in a synthetic spin one chain. The qubit is described by a two-leg multi-orbital Hubbard Kanamori (HK) model with parameters obtained from the microscopic calculations of up to eight electrons in a single and double quantum dot. In this HK model describing long arrays of quantum dots, using both exact diagonalization and matrix product state (MPS) tools, we demonstrate a four-fold quasidegenerate ground state separated from excited states by a finite energy gap similar to a Heisenberg spin-1 chain in the Haldane phase. We demonstrate the existence of spin-12 quasiparticles at the edges of the chain by observing the magnetic field dependence of the low energy spectrum as a function of applied magnetic field. The applied magnetic field also isolates the singlet and Sz=0 triplet states from the other triplet components allowing these states to serve as a qubit basis. Most importantly, the regions in parameter space where the low energy spectrum of the multi-orbital Hubbard chain yields a Heisenberg spin-1 chain spectrum are mapped out. Due to the finite energy gap, this qubit has the potential to be protected against perturbations.

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