Probing ground-state degeneracies of a strongly interacting Fermi-Hubbard model with superconducting correlations
Sebastiaan L. D. ten Haaf, Sebastian Miles, Qingzhen Wang, A. Mert Bozkurt, Ivan Kulesh, Yining Zhang, Christian G. Prosko, Michael Wimmer, Srijit Goswami

TL;DR
This paper investigates ground-state degeneracies in a strongly interacting Fermi-Hubbard model realized with superconducting correlations in quantum dot arrays, revealing conditions for degeneracy lifting and restoration, and exploring emergent Majorana and parafermion states.
Contribution
It demonstrates the realization and control of degeneracies in a Fermi-Hubbard system with superconducting correlations using quantum dot arrays, connecting condensed matter models with quantum simulation.
Findings
Zero-bias peaks indicate Majorana Kramers pairs or $ ext{Z}_3$-parafermions in two-site systems.
Degeneracy in three-site systems can be lifted or restored by tuning phase differences.
Degeneracies are sensitive to quantum dot detuning, affecting robustness.
Abstract
The Fermi-Hubbard model and its rich phase diagram naturally emerges as a description for a wide range of electronic systems. Recent advances in semiconductor-superconductor hybrid quantum dot arrays have allowed to realize degenerate quantum systems in a controllable way, e.g., allowing to observe robust zero-bias peaks in Kitaev chains, indicative for Majorana bound states. In this work, we connect these two domains. Noting the strong on-site Coulomb repulsion within quantum dots, we study small arrays of spinful hybrid quantum dots implemented in a two-dimensional electron gas. This system constitutes a Fermi-Hubbard model with inter-site superconducting correlations. For two electronic sites, we find robust zero-bias peaks indicative of a strongly degenerate spectrum hosting emergent Majorana Kramers pairs or -parafermions. Extending to three sites, we find that these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTopological Materials and Phenomena · Advanced Condensed Matter Physics · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides
