Electric control of the single hole g-factor by 400% in a silicon MOS quantum dot.

ORAL

Abstract

Holes in silicon quantum dots are attracting significant attention for their potential use as fast, highly coherent spin qubits [1]. However, there are still gaps in the understanding of the physics of hole spins. For example, the full effects of confinement and spin-orbit coupling on hole spin states remains an open problem. Studies of the Lande g-tensor are valuable for characterizing this underlying spin physics, however most studies of holes have been performed in an unknown orbital configuration where spin-orbit coupling can lead to complex non-trivial spin effects. Studies of a single hole in a known and reproducible orbital state can therefore provide valuable insight into the complex spin physics.

In this work we confine a single hole in a known orbital state [2] and study the Lande g-tensor using a 3D vector magnet. We compare the g-tensor for different confinement profiles and find the g-tensor can be strongly modulated and even rotated by up to 30 degrees. These results show that the anisotropy of the single hole g-tensor is due to symmetries in the tunable electric confinement. This tunability can be harnessed for further use of holes in spin qubit applications.

[1] C. Kloeffel et al., Phys. Rev. B 88, 241405 (2013)
[2] S. D. Liles et al., Nature Communications 9 (2018)

Presenters

  • Scott Liles

    • Univ of New South Wales

Authors

  • Scott Liles

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Frederico Martins

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Dmitry Miserev

    • Department of Physics, University of Basel
    • University of Basel
  • Ian Thorvaldson

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Matthew Rendell

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Fay E. Hudson

    • UNSW Sydney
    • Univ of New South Wales
    • University of New South Wales
  • Menno Veldhorst

    • Delft University of Technology
    • QuTech and Kavli Institute of Nanoscience
    • University of Twente
    • QuTech, Delft University of Technology
    • Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands
  • Oleg Sushkov

    • University of New South Wales & FLEET ARC
    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Andrew Steven Dzurak

    • UNSW Sydney
    • Univ of New South Wales
    • University of New South Wales
  • Alex Hamilton

    • University of New South Wales & FLEET ARC
    • Univ of New South Wales