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A silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor electron spin-orbit qubit

Nature Communications

Jock, Ryan M.; Jacobson, Noah T.; Harvey-Collard, Patrick; Mounce, Andrew M.; Srinivasa, Vanita S.; Ward, Daniel R.; Anderson, John M.; Manginell, Ronald P.; Wendt, J.R.; Rudolph, Martin R.; Pluym, Tammy P.; Laros, James H.; Baczewski, Andrew D.; Witzel, Wayne W.; Carroll, Malcolm

The silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) material system is a technologically important implementation of spin-based quantum information processing. However, the MOS interface is imperfect leading to concerns about 1/f trap noise and variability in the electron g-factor due to spin-orbit (SO) effects. Here we advantageously use interface-SO coupling for a critical control axis in a double-quantum-dot singlet-triplet qubit. The magnetic fieldorientation dependence of the g-factors is consistent with Rashba and Dresselhaus interface-SO contributions. The resulting all-electrical, two-Axis control is also used to probe the MOS interface noise. The measured inhomogeneous dephasing time, T2m, of 1.6 ?s is consistent with 99.95% 28Si enrichment. Furthermore, when tuned to be sensitive to exchange fluctuations, a quasi-static charge noise detuning variance of 2 μeV is observed, competitive with low-noise reports in other semiconductor qubits. This work, therefore, demonstrates that the MOS interface inherently provides properties for two-Axis qubit control, while not increasing noise relative to other material choices.

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Weak anti-localization of two-dimensional holes in germanium beyond the diffusive regime

Nanoscale

Chou, C.T.; Jacobson, Noah T.; Moussa, Jonathan E.; Baczewski, Andrew D.; Chuang, Y.; Liu, C.Y.; Li, J.Y.; Lu, Tzu-Ming L.

Gate-controllable spin-orbit coupling is often one requisite for spintronic devices. For practical spin field-effect transistors, another essential requirement is ballistic spin transport, where the spin precession length is shorter than the mean free path such that the gate-controlled spin precession is not randomized by disorder. In this letter, we report the observation of a gate-induced crossover from weak localization to weak anti-localization in the magneto-resistance of a high-mobility two-dimensional hole gas in a strained germanium quantum well. From the magneto-resistance, we extract the phase-coherence time, spin-orbit precession time, spin-orbit energy splitting, and cubic Rashba coefficient over a wide density range. The mobility and the mean free path increase with increasing hole density, while the spin precession length decreases due to increasingly stronger spin-orbit coupling. As the density becomes larger than ∼6 × 1011 cm-2, the spin precession length becomes shorter than the mean free path, and the system enters the ballistic spin transport regime. We also report here the numerical methods and code developed for calculating the magneto-resistance in the ballistic regime, where the commonly used HLN and ILP models for analyzing weak localization and anti-localization are not valid. These results pave the way toward silicon-compatible spintronic devices.

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Spectroscopy of Multielectrode Tunnel Barriers

Physical Review Applied

Carroll, Malcolm; Shirkhorshidian, Amir; Gamble, John K.; Maurer, Leon M.; Carr, Stephen M.; Dominguez, Jason J.; Ten Eyck, Gregory A.; Wendt, J.R.; Nielsen, Erik N.; Jacobson, Noah T.; Lilly, Michael L.

Despite their ubiquity in nanoscale electronic devices, the physics of tunnel barriers has not been developed to the extent necessary for the engineering of devices in the few-electron regime. This problem is of urgent interest, as this is the specific regime into which current extreme-scale electronics fall. Here, we propose theoretically and validate experimentally a compact model for multielectrode tunnel barriers, suitable for design-rules-based engineering of tunnel junctions in quantum devices. We perform transport spectroscopy at approximately T=4 K, extracting effective barrier heights and widths for a wide range of biases, using an efficient Landauer-Büttiker tunneling model to perform the analysis. We find that the barrier height shows several regimes of voltage dependence, either linear or approximately exponential. Effects on threshold, such as metal-insulator transition and lateral confinement, are included because they influence parameters that determine barrier height and width (e.g., the Fermi energy and local electric fields). We compare these results to semiclassical solutions of Poisson's equation and find them to agree qualitatively. Finally, this characterization technique is applied to an efficient lateral tunnel barrier design that does not require an electrode directly above the barrier region in order to estimate barrier heights and widths.

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High-Fidelity Single-Shot Readout for a Spin Qubit via an Enhanced Latching Mechanism

Physical Review. X

Carroll, Malcolm; Harvey-Collard, Patrick; D'Anjou, Benjamin; Rudolph, Martin R.; Jacobson, Noah T.; Dominguez, Jason J.; Ten Eyck, Gregory A.; Wendt, J.R.; Pluym, Tammy P.; Lilly, Michael L.; Coish, William A.; Pioro-Ladriere, Michel

The readout of semiconductor spin qubits based on spin blockade is fast but suffers from a small charge signal. Previous work suggested large benefits from additional charge mapping processes; however, uncertainties remain about the underlying mechanisms and achievable fidelity. In this work, we study the single-shot fidelity and limiting mechanisms for two variations of an enhanced latching readout. We achieve average single-shot readout fidelities greater than 99.3% and 99.86% for the conventional and enhanced readout, respectively, the latter being the highest to date for spin blockade. The signal amplitude is enhanced to a full one-electron signal while preserving the readout speed. Furthermore, layout constraints are relaxed because the charge sensor signal is no longer dependent on being aligned with the conventional (2,0)–(1,1) charge dipole. Silicon donor-quantum-dot qubits are used for this study, for which the dipole insensitivity substantially relaxes donor placement requirements. One of the readout variations also benefits from a parametric lifetime enhancement by replacing the spin-relaxation process with a charge-metastable one. This provides opportunities to further increase the fidelity. The relaxation mechanisms in the different regimes are investigated. This work demonstrates a readout that is fast, has a one-electron signal, and results in higher fidelity. As a result, it further predicts that going beyond 99.9% fidelity in a few microseconds of measurement time is within reach.

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Coherent coupling between a quantum dot and a donor in silicon

Nature Communications

Carroll, Malcolm; Harvey-Collard, Patrick; Jacobson, Noah T.; Rudolph, Martin R.; Wendt, J.R.; Pluym, Tammy P.; Laros, James H.; Pioro-Ladriere, Michel; Dominguez, Jason J.

Individual donors in silicon chips are used as quantum bits with extremely low error rates. However, physical realizations have been limited to one donor because their atomic size causes fabrication challenges. Quantum dot qubits, in contrast, are highly adjustable using electrical gate voltages. This adjustability could be leveraged to deterministically couple donors to quantum dots in arrays of qubits. In this work, we demonstrate the coherent interaction of a 31P donor electron with the electron of a metal-oxide-semiconductor quantum dot. We form a logical qubit encoded in the spin singlet and triplet states of the two-electron system. We show that the donor nuclear spin drives coherent rotations between the electronic qubit states through the contact hyperfine interaction. This provides every key element for compact two-electron spin qubits requiring only a single dot and no additional magnetic field gradients, as well as a means to interact with the nuclear spin qubit.

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Results 26–50 of 96
Results 26–50 of 96