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Performance Optimization of Cascaded Subband Degeneracy Cryogenic Refrigerator

POSTER

Abstract

The design for a cascaded solid-state refrigerator is introduced as an alternative to dilution refrigerators for eventual use in cryogenic cooling of quantum computers. The design achieves cooling through adiabatic subband degeneracy expansion in a closed-cycle electron heat-pump controlled by electrostatic gates – a cooling mechanism whose single-shot principle was first outlined by Rego and Kirceznow (1999). Whereas a single stage reduces temperature by at most the ratio of the degeneracies g1 and g2 of the “compressed” and “expanded” quantum well states, here a multi-stage, cascaded design is shown to reach lower temperatures. The optimal ratio of areas between successive hot and cold stages is equal to the square root of g2/g1. In a 1 K heat bath, a 1 cm2, double degeneracy two-stage device can reach a base temperature of 0.68 K. Multi-stage refrigerators have base temperatures below 0.10 K, where electrons and phonons thermally decouple. Modeling the Joule heating and thermal conduction through gate wires, as well as electron-phonon coupling, the parasitic heat load at low temperatures can be determined. The thermodynamic coefficients of performance for this device are also derived.

Publication: Manuscript in preparation<br>

Presenters

  • Thomas Douglas

    Northwestern University

Authors

  • Thomas Douglas

    Northwestern University

  • Chulin Wang

    Northwestern University

  • Matthew Grayson

    Northwestern University, Northwestern University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering