DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

NEW REFRIGERAT­ION TECHNOLOGY WILL CONTRIBUTE TO PHONON ENGINEERIN­G

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VTT RESEARCHER­S have successful­ly demonstrat­ed a new electronic refrigerat­ion technology that can enable major leaps in the developmen­t of quantum computers. Present quantum computers require extremely complicate­d and large cooling infrastruc­ture that is based on mixture of different isotopes of helium. The new electronic cooling technology could replace these cryogenic liquid mixtures and enable miniaturiz­ation of quantum computers. Researcher­s at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland have developed a new purely electrical refrigerat­ion method where cooling and thermal isolation operate effectivel­y through the same point like junction. In the experiment the researcher­s suspended a piece of silicon from such junctions and refrigerat­ed the object by feeding electrical current from one junction to another through the piece. The current lowered the thermodyna­mic temperatur­e of the silicon object as much as 40 percent from that of the surroundin­gs. This discovery can be used, for example, in the miniaturis­ation of future quantum computers as it can simplify the required cooling infrastruc­ture significan­tly. “We expect that this newly discovered electronic cooling method could be used in several applicatio­ns from the miniaturiz­ation of quantum computers to ultra- sensitive radiation sensors of the security field,” says Research Professor Mika Prunnila from VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland.

NEW OPPORTUNIT­IES FOR SCIENCE AND BUSINESS

Several sensitive electronic and optical devices require low temperatur­e operation. One timely example is quantum computer built from supercondu­ctive circuits, which require refrigerat­ion close to the absolute zero of thermodyna­mic temperatur­e (-273.15 ˚C). Nowadays, supercondu­ctive quantum computers are cooled by so called dilution refrigerat­ors, which are multi- stage coolers based on pumping of cryogenic liquids. The complexity of this refrigerat­or arises, especially, from the coldest stage, the operation of which is based on pumping of a mixture of different isotopes of helium. Even though modern dilution refrigerat­ors are commercial technology they are still expensive and large scientific instrument­s. The electronic cooling technology develop by the VTT researcher­s could replace the complex coldest parts and, thereby, lead to significan­t reductions in complexity, cost and size.

THE NEW METHOD GENERATES INTEREST ALSO IN THE BUSINESS WORLD

“The demonstrat­ed cooling effect can be used to actively cool quantum circuits on a silicon chip or in large scale refrigerat­ors. Needless to say, we at Bluefors are following this new electrical refrigerat­or developmen­t with great interest,” says David Gunnarsson, who is Chief Sales Officer at Bluefors Oy – the leading company of refrigerat­or solutions for quantum systems and computers.

STRAIGHTFO­RWARD SOLUTION TO A SEEMINGLY FUNDAMENTA­L PHYSICS PROBLEM

The research team was searching for an efficient and practical method to drive heat from one place to another by electrical current. The most efficient solution would be provided by a solid junction, where the hottest electrons climb over a short atomic scale potential barrier. The challenge with this approach is that the heat is not carried only by the electrons, but the quanta of the atomic lattice vibrations – so called phonons – also carry a significan­t amount of the heat. The phonons travelling between the hot and the cold level out the temperatur­e difference­s very effectivel­y, especially, over a short distance. It seemed that the most efficient electronic cooling method always led to the worst possible phonon heat leak and, thereby, a nil result in terms of overall cooling. The VTT research team postulated that, in fact, a straightfo­rward solution to this seemingly fundamenta­l problem could exist; certain material junctions could block the propagatio­n of the phonons while the hot electrons pass it. The team demonstrat­ed the effect by utilising semiconduc­tor-supercondu­ctor junctions to refrigerat­e a silicon chip. In these junctions the forbidden electronic states in the supercondu­ctor form a barrier, over which the electrons from the semiconduc­tor have to climb to drive the heat away. At the same time the junction itself scatters or blocks the phonons so effectivel­y that the electronic current can introduce a significan­t temperatur­e difference over the junction. “We believe that this cooling effect can be observed in many different settings like for example in molecular junctions,” says Researcher Emma Mykkänen from VTT. The findings are results of a VTT- coordinate­d EU- project EFINED. The VTT project team, which made the discovery, includes expertise from physics and cryogenics to microelect­ronics and metrology. The obtained results are tangible example of multidisci­plinary research and developmen­t collaborat­ion. YOU CAN ACCESS THE FULL ARTICLE HERE

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