English

Shuttling an electron spin through a silicon quantum dot array

Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics 2023-09-25 v2 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Coherent links between qubits separated by tens of micrometers are expected to facilitate scalable quantum computing architectures for spin qubits in electrically-defined quantum dots. These links create space for classical on-chip control electronics between qubit arrays, which can help to alleviate the so-called wiring bottleneck. A promising method of achieving coherent links between distant spin qubits consists of shuttling the spin through an array of quantum dots. Here, we use a linear array of four tunnel-coupled quantum dots in a 28Si/SiGe heterostructure to create a short quantum link. We move an electron spin through the quantum dot array by adjusting the electrochemical potential for each quantum dot sequentially. By pulsing the gates repeatedly, we shuttle an electron forward and backward through the array up to 250 times, which corresponds to a total distance of approximately 80 {\mu}m. We make an estimate of the spin-flip probability per hop in these experiments and conclude that this is well below 0.01% per hop.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2209.00920,
  title  = {Shuttling an electron spin through a silicon quantum dot array},
  author = {A. M. J. Zwerver and S. V. Amitonov and S. L. de Snoo and M. T. Mądzik and M. Russ and A. Sammak and G. Scappucci and L. M. K. Vandersypen},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2209.00920},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

11 pages, 3 main figures, 6 appendix figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T00:37:31.558Z