2020
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-14053-w
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Coherent spin control of s-, p-, d- and f-electrons in a silicon quantum dot

Abstract: Once the periodic properties of elements were unveiled, chemical bonds could be understood in terms of the valence of atoms. Ideally, this rationale would extend to quantum dots, often termed artificial atoms, and quantum computation could be performed by merely controlling the outer-shell electrons of dot-based qubits. Imperfections in the semiconductor material, including at the atomic scale, disrupt this analogy between atoms and quantum dots, so that real devices seldom display such a systematic many-elect… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…We achieve this by isolating the QDs from the electron reservoir, initialising and reading the qubits solely via tunnelling of electrons between the two QDs [7][8][9]. We coherently control the qubits using electrically-driven spin resonance (EDSR) [10,11] in isotopically enriched silicon 28 Si [12], attaining single-qubit gate fidelities of 98.6% and coherence time T * 2 = 2 µs during 'hot' operation, comparable to those of spin qubits in natural silicon at millikelvin temperatures [13][14][15][16]. Furthermore, we show that the unit cell can be operated at magnetic fields as low as 0.1 T, corresponding to a qubit control frequency of 3.5 GHz, where the qubit energy is well below the thermal energy.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…We achieve this by isolating the QDs from the electron reservoir, initialising and reading the qubits solely via tunnelling of electrons between the two QDs [7][8][9]. We coherently control the qubits using electrically-driven spin resonance (EDSR) [10,11] in isotopically enriched silicon 28 Si [12], attaining single-qubit gate fidelities of 98.6% and coherence time T * 2 = 2 µs during 'hot' operation, comparable to those of spin qubits in natural silicon at millikelvin temperatures [13][14][15][16]. Furthermore, we show that the unit cell can be operated at magnetic fields as low as 0.1 T, corresponding to a qubit control frequency of 3.5 GHz, where the qubit energy is well below the thermal energy.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Figure 1a shows a scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor (Si-MOS) double QD device nominally identical to the one measured. The device is designed with a cobalt micromagnet to facilitate EDSR, whereby an AC voltage at frequency f qubit is applied to the micromagnet electrode to drive spin resonance [10], and a single electron transistor (SET) charge sensor is used to detect changes in the electron occupation of the two QDs [11]. The experimental setup is described in Extended Data Figure 1.…”
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confidence: 99%
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