A Dressed Spin Qubit in Silicon

ORAL

Abstract

Coherent dressing of a quantum two-level system has been demonstrated on a variety of systems, including atoms, self-assembled quantum dots, and superconducting quantum bits, and can be demonstrated by measuring Rabi oscillations, or a Mollow triplet in the spectrum. It can be used to gain access to a new quantum system with improved properties - a different and tunable level splitting, faster and easier control, and longer coherence times. In our work we investigate the properties of the dressed, donor-bound electron spin in silicon, and probe its potential for the use as quantum bit in scalable architectures. Here, the two dressed spin-polariton levels constitute the quantum bit. The dressed qubit can be coherently driven with an oscillating magnetic field, an oscillating electric field, by frequency modulating the driving field, or by a simple detuning pulse. We measure coherence times of T2* $=$ 2.4 ms and T2 $=$ 9 ms (Hahn echo), one order of magnitude longer than those of the undressed qubit.

*This research was funded by the ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (project number CE110001027) and the US Army Research Office (W911NF-13-1-0024).

Authors

  • Arne Laucht

    • UNSW Australia
  • Rachpon Kalra

    • UNSW Australia
  • Juan Dehollain

    • UNSW Australia
  • Stephanie Simmons

    • UNSW Australia
  • Juha Muhonen

    • UNSW Australia
  • Fahd A. Mohiyaddin

    • UNSW Australia
  • Solomon Freer

    • UNSW Australia
  • Fay Hudson

    • UNSW Australia
  • Kohei Itoh

    • Keio University
  • David Jamieson

    • University of Melbourne
    • Univ Melbourne
  • Jeffrey McCallum

    • University of Melbourne
    • Univ Melbourne
  • Andrew Dzurak

    • UNSW Australia
  • Andrea Morello

    • UNSW Australia