Directional scrambling of quantum information in helical multiferroics
M. Sekania, M. Melz, N. Sedlmayr, Sunil K. Mishra, J. Berakdar

TL;DR
This paper investigates how quantum information spreads anisotropically in helical multiferroic materials, revealing electric-field controlled directionality of quantum scrambling and correlation buildup using out-of-time-ordered commutators.
Contribution
It introduces a method to quantify directional quantum scrambling in oxide-based helical spin systems with ferroelectric order, highlighting the role of topological phases and symmetry.
Findings
Direction-dependent butterfly velocity $v_B(n)$ characterizes scrambling speed.
Electric field controls anisotropic quantum information propagation.
Long-time OTOC behavior depends on system integrability and conserved quantities.
Abstract
Local excitations as carriers of quantum information spread out in the system in ways governed by the underlying interaction and symmetry. Understanding this phenomenon, also called quantum scrambling, is a prerequisite for employing interacting systems for quantum information processing. The character and direction dependence of quantum scrambling can be inferred from the out-of-time-ordered commutators (OTOCs) containing information on correlation buildup and entanglement spreading. Employing OTOC, we study and quantify the directionality of quantum information propagation in oxide-based helical spin systems hosting a spin-driven ferroelectric order. In these systems, magnetoelectricity permits the spin dynamics and associated information content to be controlled by an electric field coupled to the emergent ferroelectric order. We show that topologically nontrivial quantum phases,…
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