Dispersively sensed entangling gate in silicon quantum dots fabricated on 300mm wafers
ORAL
Abstract
Silicon-based quantum processors offer scaling advantages by combining a small qubit footprint with advanced semiconductor manufacturing, promising high density, uniform qubit arrays readily integrated with complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology. Here we characterise a maximally entangling gate on a two-electron spin state defined in a double quantum dot. The dots are hosted in a planar MOS structure in natural silicon, fabricated using a hybrid 300mm optical and electron beam lithography process. This is paired with fast readout via radio-frequency dispersive measurement, enabled by an off-chip 512 MHz superconducting resonator, allowing projective measurement of the two-electron spin states. We demonstrate coherent control via the exchange interaction to perform a √SWAP gate in ≤ 8 ns within a decay time of T2SWAP ≈ 400 ns, leading to a gate quality factor ≈ 25 at this control point. The combination of this maximally entangling gate with dispersive readout in a device manufactured using 300mm wafer scale processing presents a simultaneous demonstration of many of the key ingredients required for a scalable unit cell for a silicon-based quantum processor.
*This work received support from Innovate UK [43942, 10015036]; the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/L015242/1, EP/S021582/1]; and the EU Horizon 2020 programme [951852]. MFGZ acknowledges a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/V023284/1].
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Presenters
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Jacob F Chittock-Wood
- University College London; Quantum Motion