Quantum electrodynamics with a single nuclear spin in silicon

ORAL

Abstract

The nuclear spin state of a phosphorus donor in isotopically enriched silicon-28 is an excellent system to store quantum information in the solid state. The nearly noise-free magnetic environment and the spin’s insensitivity to electric fields yield a solid-state qubit with record coherence times. However, these very features also render coupling to other quantum systems very challenging. Here we propose a novel method that uses electric fields to interface phosphorus nuclear spins with other quantum mechanical degrees of freedom. It consists of a Raman process where a microwave magnetic drive is supplemented by an electrically-driven time-dependent modulation of the hyperfine coupling to a surrounding electron. Applications of this method include the coupling of a single nuclear spin to a microwave resonator, and the long distance coupling of two nuclear spins via electric dipole-dipole interactions. Most importantly, despite being strongly coupled to other degrees of freedom via electric fields, the nuclear qubit remains highly immune to electric noise due to a new stabilization mechanism in which the magnetic drive AC-Stark shifts the qubit precession frequency to create a second-order clock transition.

Authors

  • Guilherme Tosi

    • UNSW Australia
    • UNSW Sydney
  • Fahd Mohiyaddin

    • UNSW Australia
  • Stefanie Tenberg

    • UNSW Australia
    • Univ of New South Wales
    • UNSW Sydney
  • Arne Laucht

    • UNSW Australia
    • University of New South Wales, Australia
    • UNSW Sydney
  • Vivien Schmitt

    • UNSW Australia
    • UNSW Sydney
  • Rajib Rahman

    • Purdue University
  • Gerhard Klimeck

    • Purdue University
  • Andrea Morello

    • UNSW Australia
    • University of New South Wales
    • University of New South Wales, Australia
    • UNSW Sydney