79 research outputs found
Silicon quantum dots for quantum information processing
This thesis focuses on the development and demonstration of silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) quantum dots (QDs) for spin-based quantum information processing. Firstly, by measuring the transport current through a MOS quantum dot, its multi-electron spin state was determined as the electron occupancy was reduced from twenty-seven electrons down to the single-electron limit. In particular, kinks observed in the electron addition energy as a function of magnetic field demonstrated that a valley-orbit excited state existed 100 μeV above the ground state.
Secondly, by incorporating a silicon single-electron transistor (SET) charge sensor next to a quantum dot, the electron occupancy of the dot was probed via the sensor output signal. By applying a digitally-controlled dynamic feedback loop to the charge sensor, robust detection of the QD charge state was achieved, even in the presence of charge drifts and random charge upset events.
Next, the excited states of a silicon MOS quantum dot were studied in detail. The electron occupancy and excited-state energy levels were detected using a SET charge sensor, with the aid of pulsed-voltage spectroscopy. The energy of the first orbital excited state was found to decrease rapidly as the electron occupancy increased from N = 1 to 4. By monitoring the sequential spin filling of the dot a valley splitting of ~230 μeV was extracted, which was found to be independent of electron number.
Finally, by performing single-shot spin readout on a silicon MOS quantum dot, spin lifetimes were extracted for different electron occupancies and valley splitting configurations, with a maximum one-electron spin lifetime exceeding 2 seconds. We also demonstrated the ability to tune the valley splitting energy via electrostatic gate control, with a splitting that increased linearly with applied electric field over the range 0.3 - 0.8 meV. The spin relaxation rates were found to be highly dependent on the valley splitting energy, with a dramatic rate enhancement (or hot-spot) when the Zeeman and valley splittings coincided, a process that had not previously been anticipated for silicon quantum dots
Charge Offset Stability in Si Single Electron Devices with Al Gates
We report on the charge offset drift (time stability) in Si single electron
devices (SEDs) defined with aluminum (Al) gates. The size of the charge offset
drift (0.15 ) is intermediate between that of Al/AlO/Al tunnel junctions
(greater than 1 ) and Si SEDs defined with Si gates (0.01 ). This range
of values suggests that defects in the AlO are the main cause of the charge
offset drift instability
Accessing the Full Capabilities of Filter Functions: A Tool for Detailed Noise and Control Susceptibility Analysis
The filter function formalism from quantum control theory is typically used
to determine the noise susceptibility of pulse sequences by looking at the
overlap between the filter function of the sequence and the noise power
spectral density. Importantly, the square modulus of the filter function is
used for this method, hence directional and phase information is lost. In this
work, we take advantage of the full filter function including directional and
phase information. By decomposing the filter function with phase preservation
before taking the modulus, we are able to consider the contributions to -,
- and -rotation separately. Continuously driven systems provide noise
protection in the form of dynamical decoupling by cancelling low-frequency
noise, however, generating control pulses synchronously with an arbitrary
driving field is not trivial. Using the decomposed filter function we look at
the controllability of a system under arbitrary driving fields, as well as the
noise susceptibility, and also relate the filter function to the geometric
formalism
Real-time feedback protocols for optimizing fault-tolerant two-qubit gate fidelities in a silicon spin system
Recently, several groups have demonstrated two-qubit gate fidelities in
semiconductor spin qubit systems above 99%. Achieving this regime of
fault-tolerant compatible high fidelities is nontrivial and requires exquisite
stability and precise control over the different qubit parameters over an
extended period of time. This can be done by efficiently calibrating qubit
control parameters against different sources of micro- and macroscopic noise.
Here, we present several single- and two-qubit parameter feedback protocols,
optimised for and implemented in state-of-the-art fast FPGA hardware.
Furthermore, we use wavelet-based analysis on the collected feedback data to
gain insight into the different sources of noise in the system. Scalable
feedback is an outstanding challenge and the presented implementation and
analysis gives insight into the benefits and drawbacks of qubit parameter
feedback, as feedback related overhead increases. This work demonstrates a
pathway towards robust qubit parameter feedback and systematic noise analysis,
crucial for mitigation strategies towards systematic high-fidelity qubit
operation compatible with quantum error correction protocols
Spatio-temporal correlations of noise in MOS spin qubits
In quantum computing, characterising the full noise profile of qubits can aid
the efforts towards increasing coherence times and fidelities by creating error
mitigating techniques specific to the type of noise in the system, or by
completely removing the sources of noise. Spin qubits in MOS quantum dots are
exposed to noise originated from the complex glassy behaviour of two-level
fluctuators, leading to non-trivial correlations between qubit properties both
in space and time. With recent engineering progress, large amounts of data are
being collected in typical spin qubit device experiments, and it is beneficiary
to explore data analysis options inspired from fields of research that are
experienced in managing large data sets, examples include astrophysics, finance
and climate science. Here, we propose and demonstrate wavelet-based analysis
techniques to decompose signals into both frequency and time components to gain
a deeper insight into the sources of noise in our systems. We apply the
analysis to a long feedback experiment performed on a state-of-the-art
two-qubit system in a pair of SiMOS quantum dots. The observed correlations
serve to identify common microscopic causes of noise, as well as to elucidate
pathways for multi-qubit operation with a more scalable feedback system.Comment: updated referenc
Control of dephasing in spin qubits during coherent transport in silicon
One of the key pathways towards scalability of spin-based quantum computing
systems lies in achieving long-range interactions between electrons and
increasing their inter-connectivity. Coherent spin transport is one of the most
promising strategies to achieve this architectural advantage. Experimental
results have previously demonstrated high fidelity transportation of spin
qubits between two quantum dots in silicon and identified possible sources of
error. In this theoretical study, we investigate these errors and analyze the
impact of tunnel coupling, magnetic field and spin-orbit effects on the spin
transfer process. The interplay between these effects gives rise to double dot
configurations that include regimes of enhanced decoherence that should be
avoided for quantum information processing. These conclusions permit us to
extrapolate previous experimental conclusions and rationalize the future design
of large scale quantum processors.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
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