4.6 Article

Matrix product state simulations of quantum quenches and transport in Coulomb blockaded superconducting devices

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 106, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.106.094308

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This article presents a matrix product state approach for simulating the real-time dynamics of superconducting devices and proposes a method for studying their transport properties based on the analysis of currents after quantum quenches. The proposed method allows for nonperturbative treatment of the devices' charging energy and coupling with external electrodes.
Superconducting devices subject to strong charging energy interactions and Coulomb blockade are one of the key elements for the development of nanoelectronics and constitute common building blocks of quantum computation platforms and topological superconducting setups. The study of their transport properties is nontrivial and some of their nonperturbative aspects are hard to capture with the most ordinary techniques. Here we present a matrix product state approach to simulate the real-time dynamics of these systems. We propose a study of their transport based on the analysis of the currents after quantum quenches connecting such devices with external leads. Our method is based on the combination of a Wilson chain construction for the leads and a mean-field BCS description for the superconducting scatterers. In particular, we employ a quasiparticle energy eigenbasis which greatly reduces their entanglement growth and we introduce an auxiliary degree of freedom to encode the device's total charge. This approach allows us to treat nonperturbatively both their charging energy and coupling with external electrodes. We show that our construction is able to describe the Coulomb diamond structure of a superconducting dot with subgap states, including its sequential tunneling and cotunneling features. We also study the conductance zero-bias peaks caused by Majorana modes in a blockaded Kitaev chain and compare our results with common Breit-Wigner predictions.

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