19 research outputs found
Towards a large-scale quantum simulator on diamond surface at room temperature
Strongly-correlated quantum many-body systems exhibits a variety of exotic
phases with long-range quantum correlations, such as spin liquids and
supersolids. Despite the rapid increase in computational power of modern
computers, the numerical simulation of these complex systems becomes
intractable even for a few dozens of particles. Feynman's idea of quantum
simulators offers an innovative way to bypass this computational barrier.
However, the proposed realizations of such devices either require very low
temperatures (ultracold gases in optical lattices, trapped ions,
superconducting devices) and considerable technological effort, or are
extremely hard to scale in practice (NMR, linear optics). In this work, we
propose a new architecture for a scalable quantum simulator that can operate at
room temperature. It consists of strongly-interacting nuclear spins attached to
the diamond surface by its direct chemical treatment, or by means of a
functionalized graphene sheet. The initialization, control and read-out of this
quantum simulator can be accomplished with nitrogen-vacancy centers implanted
in diamond. The system can be engineered to simulate a wide variety of
interesting strongly-correlated models with long-range dipole-dipole
interactions. Due to the superior coherence time of nuclear spins and
nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond, our proposal offers new opportunities
towards large-scale quantum simulation at room temperatures