Engineering Phonon-Qubit Interactions using Phononic Crystals

ORAL

Abstract

The ability to control phonons in solids is key for diverse quantum applications, ranging from quantum information processing to sensing. Often, phonons are sources of noise and decoherence, since they can interact with a variety of solid-state quantum systems. To mitigate this, quantum systems typically operate at milli-Kelvin temperatures to reduce the number of thermal phonons. Here we demonstrate an alternative approach that relies on engineering phononic density of states, drawing inspiration from photonic bandgap structures that have been used to control the spontaneous emission of quantum emitters. We design and fabricate diamond phononic crystals with a complete phononic bandgap spanning 50 - 70 gigahertz, tailored to suppress interactions of a single silicon-vacancy color center with resonant phonons of the thermal bath. At 4 Kelvin, we demonstrate a reduction of the phonon-induced orbital relaxation rate of the color center by a factor of 18 compared to bulk. Furthermore, we show that the phononic bandgap can efficiently suppress phonon-color center interactions up to 20 Kelvin. In addition to enabling operation of quantum memories at higher temperatures, the ability to engineer qubit-phonon interactions may enable new functionalities for quantum science and technology, where phonons are used as carriers of quantum information.

Publication: Arxiv:2310.06236

Presenters

  • Benjamin Pingault

    • Harvard University, Delft University of Technology
    • Harvard University

Authors

  • Benjamin Pingault

    • Harvard University, Delft University of Technology
    • Harvard University
  • Kazuhiro Kuruma

    • Harvard University
  • Cleaven Chia

    • Harvard University
  • Michael Haas

    • Harvard University
  • Graham Joe

    • Harvard University
  • Daniel R Assumpcao

    • Harvard University
  • Sophie Weiyi Ding

    • Harvard University
  • Chang Jin

    • Harvard University
  • CJ Xin

    • Harvard University
  • Matthew Yeh

    • Harvard University
  • Neil Sinclair

    • Harvard University
  • Marko Loncar

    • Harvard
    • Harvard University