Quantum state transfer in disordered spin chains: How much engineering is reasonable?
Analia Zwick, Gonzalo A. \'Alvarez, Joachim Stolze, Omar Osenda

TL;DR
This paper compares the performance of minimally engineered and fully engineered disordered spin chains for quantum state transfer, revealing that similar fidelities can be achieved with less complex engineering.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes two classes of spin chains under disorder, providing empirical scaling laws and insights into the trade-offs between engineering effort and transfer fidelity.
Findings
Similar transfer fidelities in both chain classes under disorder
Empirical scaling laws for fidelity as a function of chain length and disorder
Minimal boundary engineering can match fully engineered chains in performance
Abstract
The transmission of quantum states through spin chains is an important element in the implementation of quantum information technologies. Speed and fidelity of transfer are the main objectives which have to be achieved by the devices even in the presence of imperfections which are unavoidable in any manufacturing process. To reach these goals, several kinds of spin chains have been suggested, which differ in the degree of fine-tuning, or engineering, of the system parameters. In this work we present a systematic study of two important classes of such chains. In one class only the spin couplings at the ends of the chain have to be adjusted to a value different from the bulk coupling constant, while in the other class every coupling has to have a specific value. We demonstrate that configurations from the two different classes may perform similarly when subjected to the same kind of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum Information and Cryptography
