
Reduced current precision limits the reliability of hybrid superconducting devices for quantum metrology and nanoscale heat engines, highlighting the need to account for electron interactions in design.
Hybrid normal‑superconducting quantum‑dot systems are at the forefront of quantum‑enabled electronics, where Andreev reflection enables charge conversion between normal and superconducting leads. Precise control of the resulting current is essential for applications ranging from quantum metrology to nanoscale heat engines. By employing a generalized master equation built on real‑time diagrammatics and full counting statistics, the researchers provide a rigorous framework that captures interaction‑driven renormalizations beyond simplistic non‑interacting models.
The study demonstrates that Coulomb interactions reshape transport resonances and dampen superconducting coherence, leading to a measurable drop in current precision even when average currents appear unchanged. This degradation becomes especially pronounced at higher temperatures, where traditional Coulomb‑blockade signatures blur but fluctuation‑based metrics remain sensitive. Importantly, the work shows that while quantum thermodynamic uncertainty relations lose their violations under strong interactions, a newly proposed hybrid bound stays satisfied, offering a reliable limit for device performance.
For industry, these insights signal that designing hybrid superconducting components must incorporate interaction effects to maintain the ultra‑low uncertainty levels demanded by next‑generation standards. The identification of current precision as a diagnostic tool equips engineers with a quantitative target for optimizing coherence and minimizing noise. Future research will likely explore dephasing mechanisms, multi‑dot architectures, and material platforms that mitigate interaction‑induced precision loss, paving the way for robust, high‑fidelity quantum technologies.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...