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A low-disorder Metal-Oxide-Silicon double quantum dot

Abstract

One of the biggest challenges impeding the progress of Metal-Oxide-Silicon (MOS) quantum dot devices is the presence of disorder at the Si/SiO2_2 interface which interferes with controllably confining single and few electrons. In this work we have engineered a low-disorder MOS quantum double-dot device with critical electron densities, i.e. the lowest electron density required to support a conducting pathway, approaching critical electron densities reported in high quality Si/SiGe devices and commensurate with the lowest critical densities reported in any MOS device. Utilizing a nearby charge sensor, we show that the device can be tuned to the single-electron regime where charging energies of \approx8 meV are measured in both dots, consistent with the lithographic size of the dot. Probing a wide voltage range with our quantum dots and charge sensor, we detect three distinct electron traps, corresponding to a defect density consistent with the ensemble measured critical density. Low frequency charge noise measurements at 300 mK indicate a 1/ff noise spectrum of 3.4 μ\mueV/Hz1/2^{1/2} at 1 Hz and magnetospectroscopy measurements yield a valley splitting of 110±\pm26 μ\mueV. This work demonstrates that reproducible MOS spin qubits are feasible and represents a platform for scaling to larger qubit systems in MOS.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure

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    Last time updated on 11/12/2020