Proposed silicon-based quantum-computer architectures have attracted
attention because of their promise for scalability and their potential for
synergetically utilizing the available resources associated with the existing
Si technology infrastructure. Electronic and nuclear spins of shallow donors
(e.g. phosphorus) in Si are ideal candidates for qubits in such proposals
because of their long spin coherence times due to their limited interactions
with their environments. For these spin qubits, shallow donor exchange gates
are frequently invoked to perform two-qubit operations. We discuss in this
review a particularly important spin decoherence channel, and bandstructure
effects on the exchange gate control. Specifically, we review our work on donor
electron spin spectral diffusion due to background nuclear spin flip-flops, and
how isotopic purification of silicon can significantly enhance the electron
spin dephasing time. We then review our calculation of donor electron exchange
coupling in the presence of degenerate silicon conduction band valleys. We show
that valley interference leads to orders of magnitude variations in electron
exchange coupling when donor configurations are changed on an atomic scale.
These studies illustrate the substantial potential that donor electron/nuclear
spins in silicon have as candidates for qubits and simultaneously the
considerable challenges they pose. In particular, our work on spin decoherence
through spectral diffusion points to the possible importance of isotopic
purification in the fabrication of scalable solid state quantum computer
architectures. We also provide a critical comparison between the two main
proposed spin-based solid state quantum computer architectures, namely, shallow
donor bound states in Si and localized quantum dot states in GaAs.Comment: 14 pages. Review article submitted to Solid State Communication