Coherent control of Er in Si

ORAL

Abstract

Rare-earth ions in solid-state hosts exhibit low homogeneous broadening and long spin coherence at cryogenic temperatures, thus making them a promising candidate for optical-spin interfaces to achieve long-distance spin-spin coupling. Here, we present the electron spin properties of Er ensembles in Si accessed via resonant photoluminescence excitation. Samples were positioned directly on top of dedicatedly fabricated superconducting single photon detectors and resonantly excited using fiber optics. We investigated Si samples with different O doping levels and Er densities between 1016 cm-3 to 1018 cm-3 implanted using ion beam. The samples with an Er doping level of 1018 cm-3 showed an inhomogeneous linewidth of less than 400 MHz and an upper bound of 350 kHz on the homogeneous broadening.

The lower Er concentration samples of 1016 cm-3 showed inhomogeneous broadening of less than 100 MHz. Using bichromatic excitation, we were able to polarize the spin states and extract a site that is present in the high and low oxygen concentration samples. The measured lifetime of the electron spin in the optical ground state was as long as 30 seconds at a magnetic field of 60 mT and a temperature of 20 mK. By introducing a wire antenna, we observed Rabi oscillations of over 1 MHz. These narrow optical linewidths and long spin lifetimes show that Er in Si is a promising candidate for future quantum information processing applications.

*We acknowledge the AFAiiR node of the NCRIS Heavy Ion Capability for access to ion-implantation facilities. This work was supported by the ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (Grant CE170100012) and the Discovery Project (Grant DP150103699).

Publication: I. R. Berkman et al., arXiv:2108.07090 (2021)

Presenters

  • Ian R Berkman

    • University of New South Wales

Authors

  • Ian R Berkman

    • University of New South Wales
  • Alexey Lyasota

    • University of New South Wales
  • Gabriele G de Boo

    • University of New South Wales
  • John G Bartholomew

    • University of Sydney
    • The University of Sydney
  • Brett C Johnson

    • University of Melbourne
    • Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
  • Jeffrey C McCallum

    • University of Melbourne
  • Bin-Bin Xu

    • University of New South Wales
  • Shouyi Xie

    • University of New South Wales
  • Rose L Ahlefeldt

    • Australian National University
  • Matthew J Sellars

    • Australian National University
  • Chunming Yin

    • University of New South Wales
  • Sven Rogge

    • University of New South Wales