Quantum Information Processing with Ferroelectrically Coupled Quantum Dots
Abstract
I describe a proposal to construct a quantum information processor using ferroelectrically coupled Ge/Si quantum dots. The spin of single electrons form the fundamental qubits. Small (<10 nm diameter) Ge quantum dots are optically excited to create spin polarized electrons in Si. The static polarization of an epitaxial ferroelectric thin film confines electrons laterally in the semiconductor; spin interactions between nearest neighbor electrons are mediated by the nonlinear process of optical rectification. Single qubit operations are achieved through "g-factor engineering" in the Ge/Si structures; spin-spin interactions occur through Heisenberg exchange, controlled by ferroelectric gates. A method for reading out the final state, while required for quantum computing, is not described; electronic approaches involving single electron transistors may prove fruitful in satisfying this requirement.
Cite
@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0101026,
title = {Quantum Information Processing with Ferroelectrically Coupled Quantum Dots},
author = {Jeremy Levy},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0101026},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
10 pages, 3 figures