The tin-vacancy center in diamond as a quantum memory node at 4 K
ORAL
Abstract
We recently overcame this challenge by embedding SnVs in uniformly strained thin diamond membranes, allowing us to perform efficient microwave control with 99.36(9) % gate fidelity. The introduced crystal strain further increases the ground-state splitting, which sufficiently suppresses the phonon-induced decoherence at even higher temperatures. This enabled us to show coherence times of up to 223(10) µs at 4 K.
Here we report on the recent experimental results of implementing a quantum memory by performing multi qubit gates of the electronic spin and nearby nuclei. In addition, we show our progress of embedding the diamond membranes into open optical microcavities. Combining both, we strive to make this platform a prime candidate for scalable quantum repeaters.
*This work is funded by AFOSR, Q-NEXT, ERC Advanced Grant PEDESTAL, EU Quantum Flagship 2D-SIPC, and NSF. A.M.S. acknowledges support from EPSRC/NQIT, B. P. acknowledges funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 840968.
–
Publication: Microwave-based quantum control and coherence protection of tin-vacancy spin qubits in a strain-tuned diamond membrane heterostructure, Xinghan Guo*, Alexander M. Stramma*, Zixi Li, William G. Roth, Benchen Huang, Yu Jin, Ryan A. Parker, Jesús Arjona Martínez, Noah Shofer, Cathryn P. Michaels, Carola P. Purser, Martin H. Appel, Evgeny M. Alexeev, Tianle Liu, Andrea C. Ferrari, David D. Awschalom, Nazar Delegan, Benjamin Pingault, Giulia Galli, F. Joseph Heremans, Mete Atatüre, Alexander A. High Accepted in PRX (arXiv:2307.11916)
Presenters
-
Alexander M Stramma
- University of Cambridge
- Univ of Cambridge