Quantum mechanics dominates various effects in modern research from
miniaturizing electronics, up to potentially ruling solid-state physics,
quantum chemistry and biology. To study these effects experimental quantum
systems may provide the only effective access. Seminal progress has been
achieved in a variety of physical platforms, highlighted by recent
applications. Atomic ions are known for their unique controllability and are
identical by nature, as evidenced, e.g., by performing among the most precise
atomic clocks and providing the basis for one-dimensional simulators. However,
controllable, scalable systems of more than one dimension are required to
address problems of interest and to reach beyond classical numerics with its
powerful approximative methods. Here we show, tunable, coherent couplings and
interference in a two-dimensional ion microtrap array, completing the toolbox
for a reconfigurable quantum simulator. Previously, couplings and entangling
interactions between sites in one-dimensional traps have been realized, while
coupling remained elusive in microtrap approaches. Our architecture is based on
well isolatable ions as identical quantum entities hovering above scalable CMOS
chips. In contrast to other multi-dimensional approaches, it allows individual
control in arbitrary, even non-periodic, lattice structures. Embedded control
structures can exploit the long-range Coulomb interaction to configure
synthetic, fully connected many-body systems to address multi-dimensional
problems