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Electron collider on a chip

Electron collider on a chip

Simulation of the electron trajectories after a collision in an electronic beam splitter

With the aid of a new fundamental circuit element, in nanoelectronic circuits one electron can be used to precisely modify the trajectory of another electron through their mutual Coulomb interaction.

Quantum electronics promises significant advances in ultra-sensitive measurements and quantum information processing. In nanoelectronic circuits, one electron can be used to precisely modify the trajectory of another electron through their mutual Coulomb interaction. This new fundamental circuit element has now been demonstrated by three independent research teams, whose complementary discoveries have been published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

Electrical current is a stream of charged elementary particles. In semiconductor devices, ballistic electrons move at high speeds, making it difficult to address them individually. A controlled collision of individual electrons can provide the time resolution required for one electron to interrogate the other. The operating principle of such an electron collider circuit is similar to hitting one fast moving projectile with another well-timed shot. The challenge is therefore to precisely synchronize two individual electrons to exploit their interaction.

For this purpose, scientists of QuantumFrontiers have now developed a nanoscale collider on a semiconductor chip. Such a device integrates two single-electron sources that can be triggered to picosecond accuracy. Single-electron detectors record every outcome of the collision. An electron pair is generated by two separated sources and placed on intersecting paths such that a collision can occur. If the sources are precisely synchronized, the interaction between the electrons of the pair will determine which final signalling path will be reached by which individual particle. Despite the brevity of the encounter, the theoretical models developed at the University of Latvia with inputs from the TU Braunschweig made it possible to infer electron trajectories from the experimental data and devise ways to control two-electron interaction for future applications. This demonstration of time-resolved interaction not only shows that such a flying electron can be used as an ultrafast sensor or switch, it also proves a mechanism to generate quantum entanglement — a key component of quantum computing. Appearing jointly with the consistent findings of research teams led by NEEL and NPL, these results have been published and introduced by a “News&Views” commentary in Nature Nanotechnology.

 

Original article:
N. Ubbelohde, L. Freise, E. Pavlovska, P. Silvestrov, P. Recher, M. Kokainis, G. Barinovs, F. Hohls, T. Weimann, K. Pierz, V. Kashcheyevs
wo electrons interacting at a mesoscopic beam splitter.
Nat. Nanotechnol. (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-023-01370-x