28 research outputs found
Depletion-mode Quantum Dots in Intrinsic Silicon
We report the fabrication and electrical characterization of depletion-mode
quantum dots in a two-dimensional hole gas (2DHG) in intrinsic silicon. We use
fixed charge in a SiO/AlO dielectric stack to induce a 2DHG at the
Si/SiO interface. Fabrication of the gate structures is accomplished with a
single layer metallization process. Transport spectroscopy reveals regular
Coulomb oscillations with charging energies of 10-15 meV and 3-5 meV for the
few- and many-hole regimes, respectively. This depletion-mode design avoids
complex multilayer architectures requiring precision alignment, and allows to
adopt directly best practices already developed for depletion dots in other
material systems. We also demonstrate a method to deactivate fixed charge in
the SiO/AlO dielectric stack using deep ultraviolet light, which
may become an important procedure to avoid unwanted 2DHG build-up in Si MOS
quantum bits.Comment: Accepted to Applied Physics Letters. 5 pages, 3 figure
Shuttling an electron spin through a silicon quantum dot array
Coherent links between qubits separated by tens of micrometers are expected
to facilitate scalable quantum computing architectures for spin qubits in
electrically-defined quantum dots. These links create space for classical
on-chip control electronics between qubit arrays, which can help to alleviate
the so-called wiring bottleneck. A promising method of achieving coherent links
between distant spin qubits consists of shuttling the spin through an array of
quantum dots. Here, we use a linear array of four tunnel-coupled quantum dots
in a 28Si/SiGe heterostructure to create a short quantum link. We move an
electron spin through the quantum dot array by adjusting the electrochemical
potential for each quantum dot sequentially. By pulsing the gates repeatedly,
we shuttle an electron forward and backward through the array up to 250 times,
which corresponds to a total distance of approximately 80 {\mu}m. We make an
estimate of the spin-flip probability per hop in these experiments and conclude
that this is well below 0.01% per hop.Comment: 11 pages, 3 main figures, 6 appendix figure
A fabrication guide for planar silicon quantum dot heterostructures
We describe important considerations to create top-down fabricated planar
quantum dots in silicon, often not discussed in detail in literature. The
subtle interplay between intrinsic material properties, interfaces and
fabrication processes plays a crucial role in the formation of
electrostatically defined quantum dots. Processes such as oxidation, physical
vapor deposition and atomic-layer deposition must be tailored in order to
prevent unwanted side effects such as defects, disorder and dewetting. In two
directly related manuscripts written in parallel we use techniques described in
this work to create depletion-mode quantum dots in intrinsic silicon, and
low-disorder silicon quantum dots defined with palladium gates. While we
discuss three different planar gate structures, the general principles also
apply to 0D and 1D systems, such as self-assembled islands and nanowires.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nanotechnology. 31 pages, 12 figure
Reducing charge noise in quantum dots by using thin silicon quantum wells
Charge noise in the host semiconductor degrades the performance of
spin-qubits and poses an obstacle to control large quantum processors. However,
it is challenging to engineer the heterogeneous material stack of gate-defined
quantum dots to improve charge noise systematically. Here, we address the
semiconductor-dielectric interface and the buried quantum well of a
Si/SiGe heterostructure and show the connection between charge noise,
measured locally in quantum dots, and global disorder in the host
semiconductor, measured with macroscopic Hall bars. In 5 nm thick Si
quantum wells, we find that improvements in the scattering properties and
uniformity of the two-dimensional electron gas over a 100 mm wafer correspond
to a significant reduction in charge noise, with a minimum value of
0.290.02 eV/sqrt(Hz) at 1 Hz averaged over several quantum dots. We
extrapolate the measured charge noise to simulated dephasing times to cz-gate
fidelities that improve nearly one order of magnitude. These results point to a
clean and quiet crystalline environment for integrating long-lived and
high-fidelity spin qubits into a larger system
New SERS-active junction based on cerium dioxide facet dielectric films for biosensing
Further enhance of the Raman scattering is the priority for the development of the modern molecular diagnostic methods. Expected increasing in detection sensitivity of the biological and chemical agents provides substantial progress in such areas as: proteomics (discovery of new disease markers), pharmacokinetics of drugs, analysis of toxins and infections agents, drug analysis, food safety, and environmental safety.
In this paper we investigated the possibility of the facet structures, based on cerium dioxide to further enhance the SERS signal. During the studies a new metamaterial was developed. The metamaterial is based on the facet cerium dioxide films and plasmonic nanoparticles that are immobilized on its surface. The new metamaterial provides additional SERS signal amplification factor of 211. Thus developed material offers the prospect of increasing the sensitivity and selectivity of biochemical and immunological analysis
Qubits made by advanced semiconductor manufacturing
AbstractFull-scale quantum computers require the integration of millions of qubits, and the potential of using industrial semiconductor manufacturing to meet this need has driven the development of quantum computing in silicon quantum dots. However, fabrication has so far relied on electron-beam lithography and, with a few exceptions, conventional lift-off processes that suffer from low yield and poor uniformity. Here we report quantum dots that are hosted at a 28Si/28SiO2 interface and fabricated in a 300 mm semiconductor manufacturing facility using all-optical lithography and fully industrial processing. With this approach, we achieve nanoscale gate patterns with excellent yield. In the multi-electron regime, the quantum dots allow good tunnel barrier control—a crucial feature for fault-tolerant two-qubit gates. Single-spin qubit operation using magnetic resonance in the few-electron regime reveals relaxation times of over 1 s at 1 T and coherence times of over 3 ms.</jats:p
Single-electron tunneling through an individual arsenic dopant in silicon
We report the single-electron tunneling behaviour of a silicon nanobridge where the effective island is a single As dopant atom. The device is a gated silicon nanobridge with a thickness and width of ∼20 nm, fabricated from a commercially available silicon-on-insulator wafer, which was first doped with As atoms and then patterned using a unique CMOS-compatible technique. Transport measurements reveal characteristic Coulomb diamonds whose size decreases with gate voltage. Such a dependence indicates that the island of the single-electron transistor created is an individual arsenic dopant atom embedded in the silicon lattice between the source and drain electrodes, and furthermore, can be explained by the increase of the localisation region of the electron wavefunction when the higher energy levels of the dopant As atom become occupied. The charge stability diagram of the device shows features which can be attributed to adjacent dopants, localised in the nanobridge, acting as charge traps. From the measured device transport, we have evaluated the tunnel barrier properties and obtained characteristic device capacitances. The fabrication, control and understanding of such “single-atom” devices marks a further step towards the implementation of single-atom electronics