17 research outputs found
Cavity-enhanced measurements of defect spins in silicon carbide
The identification of new solid-state defect-qubit candidates in widely used semiconductors has the potential to enable the use of nanofabricated devices for enhanced qubit measurement and control operations. In particular, the recent discovery of optically active spin states in silicon carbide thin films offers a scalable route for incorporating defect qubits into on-chip photonic devices. Here, we demonstrate the use of 3C silicon carbide photonic crystal cavities for enhanced excitation of color-center defect spin ensembles in order to increase measured photoluminescence signal count rates, optically detected magnetic-resonance signal intensities, and optical spin initialization rates. We observe an up to a factor of 30 increase in the photoluminescence and optically detected magnetic-resonance signals from Ky5 color centers excited by cavity-resonant excitation and increase the rate of ground-state spin initialization by approximately a factor of 2. Furthermore, we show that the 705-fold reduction in excitation mode volume and enhanced excitation and collection efficiencies provided by the structures can be used to overcome inhomogenous broadening in order to facilitate the study of defect-qubit subensemble properties. These results highlight some of the benefits that nanofabricated devices offer for engineering the local photonic environment of color-center defect qubits to enable applications in quantum information and sensin
The Principles of Social Order. Selected Essays of Lon L. Fuller, edited With an introduction by Kenneth I. Winston
The electron spins of semiconductor defects can have complex interactions with their host, particularly in polar materials like SiC where electrical and mechanical variables are intertwined. By combining pulsed spin resonance with ab initio simulations, we show that spin-spin interactions in 4H-SiC neutral divacancies give rise to spin states with a strong Stark effect, sub-10(-6) strain sensitivity, and highly spin-dependent photoluminescence with intensity contrasts of 15%-36%. These results establish SiC color centers as compelling systems for sensing nanoscale electric and strain fields
Polytype control of spin qubits in silicon carbide
Crystal defects can confine isolated electronic spins and are promising
candidates for solid-state quantum information. Alongside research focusing on
nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond, an alternative strategy seeks to identify
new spin systems with an expanded set of technological capabilities, a
materials driven approach that could ultimately lead to "designer" spins with
tailored properties. Here, we show that the 4H, 6H and 3C polytypes of SiC all
host coherent and optically addressable defect spin states, including spins in
all three with room-temperature quantum coherence. The prevalence of this spin
coherence shows that crystal polymorphism can be a degree of freedom for
engineering spin qubits. Long spin coherence times allow us to use double
electron-electron resonance to measure magnetic dipole interactions between
spin ensembles in inequivalent lattice sites of the same crystal. Together with
the distinct optical and spin transition energies of such inequivalent spins,
these interactions provide a route to dipole-coupled networks of separately
addressable spins.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figures, and supplementary information and figure
Microwave Packaging for Superconducting Qubits
Over the past two decades, the performance of superconducting quantum
circuits has tremendously improved. The progress of superconducting qubits
enabled a new industry branch to emerge from global technology enterprises to
quantum computing startups. Here, an overview of superconducting quantum
circuit microwave control is presented. Furthermore, we discuss one of the
persistent engineering challenges in the field, how to control the
electromagnetic environment of increasingly complex superconducting circuits
such that they are simultaneously protected and efficiently controllable
Electrically and mechanically tunable electron spins in silicon carbide color centers
The electron spins of semiconductor defects can have complex interactions
with their host, particularly in polar materials like SiC where electrical and
mechanical variables are intertwined. By combining pulsed spin resonance with
ab-initio simulations, we show that spin-spin interactions within SiC neutral
divacancies give rise to spin states with an enhanced Stark effect, sub-10**-6
strain sensitivity, and highly spin-dependent photoluminescence with intensity
contrasts of 15-36%. These results establish SiC color centers as compelling
systems for sensing nanoscale fields.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
Microwave Package Design for Superconducting Quantum Processors
Solid-state qubits with transition frequencies in the microwave regime, such
as superconducting qubits, are at the forefront of quantum information
processing. However, high-fidelity, simultaneous control of superconducting
qubits at even a moderate scale remains a challenge, partly due to the
complexities of packaging these devices. Here, we present an approach to
microwave package design focusing on material choices, signal line engineering,
and spurious mode suppression. We describe design guidelines validated using
simulations and measurements used to develop a 24-port microwave package.
Analyzing the qubit environment reveals no spurious modes up to 11GHz. The
material and geometric design choices enable the package to support qubits with
lifetimes exceeding 350 {\mu}s. The microwave package design guidelines
presented here address many issues relevant for near-term quantum processors.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure