色色啦

News

Entangling electrons with heat

Entanglement is key for quantum computing and communications technology; Aalto researchers can now extract entangled electrons using heat
An electron microscope image of the device used to extract entangled electrons
False-colour electron microscope image of the sample, the green layers are graphene on top of the grey silicon dioxide. The blue metal electrode with narrow contact to graphene in the centre is used to extract the entangled electrons

A joint group of scientists from Finland, Russia, China and the USA have demonstrated that temperature difference can be used to entangle pairs of electrons in normal conductors in contact with superconducting structures. The experimental discovery, published in , promises powerful applications in quantum devices, bringing us one step closer towards applications of the second quantum revolution.

The team, led by Professor Pertti Hakonen from Aalto University, has shown that the thermoelectric effect provides a new method for producing entangled electrons in a new device.  鈥淨uantum entanglement is the cornerstone of the novel quantum technologies. This concept, however, has puzzled many physicists over the years, including Albert Einstein who worried a lot about the spooky interaction at a distance that it causes鈥, says Prof. Hakonen.

In quantum computing, entanglement is used to fuse individual quantum systems into one, which exponentially increases their total computational capacity. 鈥淓ntanglement can also be used in quantum cryptography, enabling the secure exchange of information over long distances鈥, explains Prof. Gordey Lesovik, from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, who has acted several times as a visiting professor at Aalto University School of Science. Given the significance of entanglement to quantum technology, the ability to create entanglement easily and controllably is an important goal for researchers.

The researchers designed a device where a superconductor was layered with graphene and metal electrodes. 鈥淪uperconductivity is caused by entangled pairs of electrons called 鈥淐ooper pairs鈥. Using a temperature difference, we cause them to split, with each electron then moving to different normal metal electrode,鈥 explains doctoral candidate Nikita Kirsanov, from Aalto University. 鈥淭he resulting electrons remain entangled despite being separated for quite long distances.鈥

Along with the practical implications, the work has significant fundamental importance. The experiment has shown that the process of Cooper pair splitting works as a mechanism for turning temperature difference into correlated electrical signals in superconducting structures. The developed experimental scheme may also become a platform for original quantum thermodynamical experiments.

The work was carried out using the OtaNano research infrastructure. OtaNano provides state-of-the-art working environment and equipment for nanoscience and -technology, and quantum technologies research in Finland. OtaNano is operated by Aalto University and VTT, and is available for academic and commercial users internationally. To find out more, visit their website. The work was supported by funds from (Academy of Finland CoE). Gordey Lesovik鈥檚 visiting professorship funding came from Aalto University School of Science and Zhenbing Tan鈥檚 post doctoral grant came from the Academy of Finland.

The full paper, Thermoelectric current in a graphene Cooper pair splitter can be read here

Image credit: Low Temperature Laboratory, Aalto University

Contact

Pertti Hakonen
Professor
Aalto University
pertti.hakonen@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Artistic illustration: Algorithms over a computer chip
Research & Art Published:

Aalto computer scientists in STOC 2025

Two papers from Aalto Department of Computer Science were accepted to the Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC).
A person walks past a colourful mural on a brick wall, illuminated by street lamps and electric lines overhead.
Cooperation, Research & Art, University Published:

New Academy Research Fellows and Academy Projects

A total of 44 Aalto researchers received Academy Research Fellowship and Academy Project funding from the Research Council of Finland 鈥 congratulations to all!
Two flags at Aalto University: a pride flag and a yellow flag. A modern building and green trees are in the background.
Press releases Published:

LGBTQ-Friendly Firms More Innovative

Firms with progressive LGBTQ policies produce more patents, have more patent citations, and have higher innovation quality as measured by patent originality, generality, and internationality.