English

Protecting entanglement in superconducting qubits

Quantum Physics 2009-09-30 v2

Abstract

When a two-qubit system is initially maximally-entangled, two independent decoherence channels, one per qubit, would greatly reduce the entanglement of the two-qubit system when it reaches its stationary state. We propose a method on how to minimize such a loss of entanglement in open quantum systems. We find that the quantum entanglement of general two-qubit systems with controllable parameters can be protected by tuning both the single-qubit parameters and the two-qubit coupling strengths. Indeed, the maximum fidelity FmaxF_{\rm max} between the stationary entangled state, ρ\rho_{\infty}, and the maximally-entangled state, ρm\rho_m, can be about 2/3max{tr(ρρm)}=Fmax2/3\approx\max\{{\rm tr}(\rho_{\infty}\rho_m)\}=F_{\rm max}, corresponding to a maximum stationary concurrence, CmaxC_{\rm max}, of about 1/3C(ρ)=Cmax1/3\approx C(\rho_{\infty})=C_{\rm max}. This is significant because the quantum entanglement of the two-qubit system can be protected, even for a long time. We apply our proposal to several types of two-qubit superconducting circuits, and show how the entanglement of these two-qubit circuits can be optimized by varying experimentally-controllable parameters.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0808.0395,
  title  = {Protecting entanglement in superconducting qubits},
  author = {Jing Zhang and Yu-xi Liu and Chun-Wen Li and Tzyh-Jong Tarn and Franco Nori},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0808.0395},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

13 pages, 9 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T11:07:15.748Z