A photonic platform for donor spin qubits in silicon

Donor impurity spins in silicon-28 are highly competitive qubits for upcoming solid-state quantum technologies, yet a proven scalable strategy for multi-qubit devices remains conspicuously absent. These CMOS-compatible, atomically identical qubits offer significant advantages including 3-hour cohere...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2016-06
Hauptverfasser: Morse, Kevin J, Abraham, Rohan J S, Riemann, Helge, Abrosimov, Nikolai V, Becker, Peter, Pohl, Hans-Joachim, Thewalt, Michael L W, Simmons, Stephanie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Donor impurity spins in silicon-28 are highly competitive qubits for upcoming solid-state quantum technologies, yet a proven scalable strategy for multi-qubit devices remains conspicuously absent. These CMOS-compatible, atomically identical qubits offer significant advantages including 3-hour coherence (\(T_2\)) lifetimes, as well as simultaneous qubit initialization, manipulation and readout fidelities near \(\sim\!99.9\%\). These properties meet the requirements for many modern quantum error correction protocols, which are essential for constructing large-scale universal quantum technologies. However, a method of reliably coupling spatially-separated qubits, which crucially does not sacrifice qubit quality and is robust to manufacturing imperfections, has yet to be identified. Here we present such a platform for donor qubits in silicon, by exploiting optically-accessible `deep' chalcogen donors. We show that these donors emit highly uniform light, can be optically initialized, and offer long-lived spin qubit ground states without requiring milliKelvin temperatures. These combined properties make chalcogen donors uniquely suitable for incorporation into silicon photonic architectures for single-shot single-qubit readout as well as for multi-qubit coupling. This unlocks clear pathways for silicon-based quantum computing, spin to photon conversion, photonic memories, silicon-integrated triggered single photon sources and all-optical silicon switches.
ISSN:2331-8422