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Welcome to the Chan Research Group!

We are a group of theoreticians interested broadly in the simulation of chemical and physical systems at the level of many-particle quantum mechanics.

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News & Updates

Ushnish's work on exact fluctuations is published in PRL

May 22, 2018

Ushnish's latest work on importance sampling deviations in nonequilibrium steady states is published in JCP

May 18, 2018

Erika Ye receives the Google PhD fellowship in Quantum Computing

April 5, 2018

Matt O'Rourke and Jason Yu receive the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship

April 2, 2018

Josh's latest work on RT-DMET for non-equilibrium electron dynamics is published in JCP

February 7, 2018

Latest Publications

Using Hyperoptimized Tensor Networks and First-Principles Electronic Structure to Simulate the Experimental Properties of the Giant {Mn84} Torus

The single-molecule magnet {Mn84} is a challenge to theory because of its high nuclearity. We directly compute two experimentally accessible observables, the field-dependent magnetization up to 75 T and the temperature-dependent heat capacity, using parameter-free theory. In particular, we use first-principles calculations to derive short- and long-range exchange interactions and compute the exact partition function of the resulting classical Potts and Ising spin models for all 84 Mn S = 2 spins to obtain observables. The latter computation is made possible by using hyperoptimized tensor network contractions, a technique developed to simulate quantum supremacy circuits. We also synthesize the magnet and measure its heat capacity and magnetization, observing qualitative agreement between theory and experiment and identifying an unusual bump in the heat capacity and a plateau in the magnetization. Our work also identifies some limitations of current theoretical modeling in large magnets, such as sensitivity to small, long-range exchange couplings.

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