Dispersively Detected Pauli Spin-Blockade in a Silicon Nanowire Field-Effect Transistor

ORAL

Abstract

We report the dispersive readout of the spin state of a double quantum dot (DQD) formed at the corner states of a silicon nanowire FET. Two face-to-face topgate electrodes allow us to independently tune the charge occupation of the quantum dot system down to the few-electron limit. We measure the charge stability of the DQD in DC transport as well as dispersively via in situ gate-based radio frequency (rf) reflectometry, where one top-gate electrode is connected to a resonator. The latter removes the need for external charge sensors in quantum computing architectures and provides a compact way to readout the dispersive shift caused by changes in the quantum capacitance during inter-dot charge transitions. Here, we observe Pauli spin-blockade in the rf response of the circuit at finite magnetic fields between singlet and triplet states. The blockade is lifted at higher magnetic fields when intra-dot triplet states become the ground state configuration. A line shape analysis of the dispersive signal reveals furthermore an intra-dot valley-orbit splitting $\Delta_{vo}\simeq 145 \mu$eV. Our results open up the possibility to operate compact CMOS technology as a singlet-triplet qubit and make split-gate silicon nanowire architectures an ideal candidate for the study of spin dynamics.

Authors

  • Andreas Betz

    • Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory, Cambridge, UK
    • Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory
  • R Wacquez

    • CEA-LETI, Grenoble, France
  • M. Vinet

    • CEA-LETI, Grenoble, France
  • X. Jehl

    • CEA-LETI, Grenoble, France
  • A. Saraiva

    • Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
    • Universitade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
    • IF, UFRJ, Brazil
  • M. Sanquer

    • CEA, INAC-SPSMS & Univ Grenoble Alpes, Grenoble, France
    • CEA-LETI, Grenoble, France
  • Andrew Ferguson

    • University of Cambridge
    • Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, UK
    • Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, UK
    • Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB3 0HE, UK
  • M. Fernando Gonzalez-Zalba

    • Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory, UK
    • Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory, Cambridge, UK
    • Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory