Degradation of electron-hole entanglement by spin-orbit coupling
J. H. Bardarson, C. W. J. Beenakker

TL;DR
This paper investigates how spin-orbit coupling causes loss of spin entanglement in electron-hole pairs generated by tunneling, providing analytical and numerical insights into the dependence of entanglement decay on system parameters.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model for entanglement degradation due to spin-orbit coupling and validates it with numerical simulations across different conductor types.
Findings
Entanglement disappears when dwell time exceeds spin-orbit coupling time.
The model applies to disordered wires and quantum dots, independent of microscopic details.
Analytical results agree well with computer simulations.
Abstract
Electron-hole pairs produced by tunneling in a degenerate electron gas lose their spin entanglement by spin-orbit coupling, which transforms the fully entangled Bell state into a partially entangled mixed density matrix of the electron and hole spins. We calculate the dependence of the entanglement (quantified by the concurrence) on the spin-orbit coupling time tau_so and on the diffusion time (or dwell time) tau_dwell of electron and hole in the conductors (with conductances >> e^2/h) at the two sides of the tunnel barrier (with conductance << e^2/h). The entanglement disappears when the ratio tau_dwell/tau_so exceeds a critical value of order unity. The results depend on the type of conductor (disordered wire or chaotic quantum dot), but they are independent of other microscopic parameters (number of channels, level spacing). Our analytical treatment relies on an "isotropy…
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