Coherent Spin Qubit Transport in Silicon

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to transport electrons across large distances will improve greatly the scalability of quantum computing systems by paving the way for fault-tolerant architectures that has a lower required number of physical qubits while allowing for long distance interactions between qubits. To this end, we demonstrated the ability to transport a single spin qubit within a double quantum dot in silicon, reporting a 99.97% polarisation transfer fidelity and a 99.4% average coherent transfer fidelity. This experimental feat also opens up questions from a theoretical perspective on the sources of error and what it could mean for further work.
In this talk, I will highlight these achievements and discuss the theoretical aspects of coherent spin transport in the context of these experimental results. We believe that these results are instrumental in demonstrating the scalability of silicon-based spin qubits.

*We acknowledge support from the Australian Research Council (FL190100167 and CE170100012), the US Army Research Office (W911NF-17-1- 0198), and the NSW Node of the Australian National Fabrication Facility.

Presenters

  • MENGKE FENG

    • Univ of New South Wales

Authors

  • Jun Yoneda

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Wister Huang

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • MENGKE FENG

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Chih Hwan Yang

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Kok Wai Chan

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Tuomo Tanttu

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • William Gilbert

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Ross C C Leon

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Fay Hudson

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Kohei M Itoh

    • Keio University
    • Keio Univ
  • Andrea Morello

    • Univ of New South Wales
    • Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications, UNSW
  • Stephen D Bartlett

    • University of Sydney
    • The University of Sydney
  • Arne Laucht

    • Univ of New South Wales
    • The University of New South Wales
  • Andre Saraiva

    • Univ of New South Wales
  • Andrew Steven Dzurak

    • Univ of New South Wales