Entropic Barriers and the Kinetic Suppression of Topological Defects
Yi-Lin Tsao, Zhu-Xi Luo

TL;DR
This paper introduces entropic protection as a mechanism to stabilize quantum phases against thermal defects by coupling to mesoscopic reservoirs, enhancing finite-size quantum memory stability.
Contribution
It demonstrates how entropic barriers can suppress defect proliferation, improving quantum phase stability and coherence in finite systems, with practical experimental proposals.
Findings
Entropic protection creates a temperature-dependent free-energy barrier.
Enhanced stabilization of topological order at finite system sizes.
Suppression of logical errors in entropic toric code and BKT transitions.
Abstract
Many quantum phases, from topological orders to superfluids, are destabilized at finite temperature by the proliferation and motion of topological defects such as anyons or vortices. Conventional protection mechanisms rely on energetic gaps and fail once thermal fluctuations exceed the gap scale. Here we examine a complementary mechanism of entropic protection, in which defect nucleation is suppressed by coupling to mesoscopic auxiliary reservoirs of dimension , generating an effective free-energy barrier that increases with temperature. In the Ising chain, this produces a characteristic three-regime evolution of the correlation length as a function of temperature - linear growth, entropy-controlled plateau, and eventual breakdown - indicating a general modification of defect behavior. Focusing on two spatial dimensions, where true finite-temperature topological order is forbidden in…
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