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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing

Navigating entanglement via Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida exchange: oscillatory, boundary-residing, pulsed, and damping-stabilized trajectories.

PubMed
Authors: Chen SH, Tan SG, Chang CR

Year

2026

Paper ID

56473

Status

Peer-reviewed

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

161

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Entanglement dynamics are fundamental to quantum technologies, yet controlling their temporal evolution in a reversible and stable manner remains challenging. We propose a solid-state framework based on the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interaction, realizable in gate-defined quantum dots or suspended structures, in which two spin qubits couple to a central spin qudit that mediates an effective, time-dependent exchange. The dynamics are governed by an exchange-time integral that unifies interaction strength and physical time into a single scalar control variable, enabling time-reversible and cyclic navigation of the Hilbert space. Crucially, we show that out-of-phase modulation grants access to higher entanglement subspaces, while introducing damping to the exchange modulation achieves stabilized trajectories that drive the system toward stationary entanglement values. This framework provides a systematic route for shaping entanglement dynamics, particularly in the near-boundary regime, using exchange control alone, overcoming the limitations of monotonic evolution and offering practical strategies for entanglement stabilization in realistic solid-state architectures, with direct relevance to quantum metrology and environment-assisted entanglement engineering.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Entanglement dynamics are fundamental to quantum technologies, yet controlling their temporal evolution in a reversible and stable manner remains challenging.

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