Development of a Si/SiO$_2$–based double quantum dot charge qubit with dispersive microwave readout

ORAL

Abstract

Coupling of a high-Q microwave resonator to superconducting qubits has been successfully used to prepare, manipulate, and read out the state of a single qubit, and to mediate interactions between qubits. Our work is geared toward implementing this architecture in a semiconductor qubit. We present the design and development of a lateral quantum dot in which a superconducting microwave resonator is capacitively coupled to a double dot charge qubit. The device is a silicon MOSFET structure with a global gate which is used to accumulate electrons at a Si/SiO$_2$ interface. A set of smaller gates are used to deplete these electrons to define a double quantum dot and adjacent conduction channels. Two of these depletion gates connect directly to the conductors of a 6 GHz co-planar stripline resonator. We present measurements of transport and conventional charge sensing used to characterize the double quantum dot, and demonstrate that it is possible to reach the few-electron regime in this system.

*This work is supported by the DARPA-QuEST program.

Authors

  • M.G. House

    • UCLA
    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • E. Henry

    • QNL, UC Berkeley
    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Andrew Schmidt

    • QNL, UC Berkeley
    • University of California, Berkeley
  • O. Naaman

    • University of Calfornia, Berkeley
  • I. Siddiqi

    • QNL, UC Berkeley
    • UC Berkeley
    • University of California, Berkeley
  • H. Pan

    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • M. Xiao

    • UCLA
    • University of California, Los Angeles
  • H.W. Jiang

    • UCLA
    • University of California, Los Angeles