Electron-nuclear interaction in 13C nanotube double quantum dots
Abstract
For coherent electron spins, hyperfine coupling to nuclei in the host material can either be a dominant source of unwanted spin decoherence or, if controlled effectively, a resource allowing storage and retrieval of quantum information. To investigate the effect of a controllable nuclear environment on the evolution of confined electron spins, we have fabricated and measured gate-defined double quantum dots with integrated charge sensors made from single-walled carbon nanotubes with a variable concentration of 13C (nuclear spin I=1/2) among the majority zero-nuclear-spin 12C atoms. Spin-sensitive transport in double-dot devices grown using methane with the natural abundance (~ 1%) of 13C is compared with similar devices grown using an enhanced (~99%) concentration of 13C. We observe strong isotope effects in spin-blockaded transport, and from the dependence on external magnetic field, estimate the hyperfine coupling in 13C nanotubes to be on the order of 100 micro-eV, two orders of magnitude larger than anticipated theoretically. 13C-enhanced nanotubes are an interesting new system for spin-based quantum information processing and memory, with nuclei that are strongly coupled to gate-controlled electrons, differ from nuclei in the substrate, are naturally confined to one dimension, lack quadrupolar coupling, and have a readily controllable concentration from less than one to 10^5 per electron.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0811.3236,
title = {Electron-nuclear interaction in 13C nanotube double quantum dots},
author = {H. O. H. Churchill and A. J. Bestwick and J. W. Harlow and F. Kuemmeth and D. Marcos and C. H. Stwertka and S. K. Watson and C. M. Marcus},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0811.3236},
year = {2013}
}
Comments
supplementary discussion at http://marcuslab.harvard.edu/13CSupp.pdf