An electron-spin qubit platform assembled atom-by-atom on a surface
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2108.09880v2
- Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2022 09:15:05 GMT
- Title: An electron-spin qubit platform assembled atom-by-atom on a surface
- Authors: Yu Wang, Yi Chen, Hong T. Bui, Christoph Wolf, Masahiro Haze, Cristina
Mier, Jinkyung Kim, Deung-jang Choi, Christopher P. Lutz, Yujeong Bae,
Soo-Hyon Phark, Andreas J. Heinrich
- Abstract summary: We demonstrate an atomic-scale qubit platform by showing atom-by-atom construction, coherent operations, and readout of multiple electron-spin qubits on a surface.
Our work marks the creation of an Angstrom-scale qubit platform, where quantum functionalities using electron spin arrays, built atom-by-atom on a surface, are now within reach.
- Score: 5.2557648054493065
- License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
- Abstract: Creating a quantum-coherent architecture at the atomic scale has long been an
ambition in quantum science and nanotechnology. This ultimate length scale
requires the use of fundamental quantum properties of atoms, such as the spin
of electrons, which naturally occurs in many solid-state environments and
allows high-fidelity operations and readout by electromagnetic means. Despite
decades of effort, however, it remains a formidable task to realize an
atomic-scale quantum architecture where multiple electron spin qubits can be
precisely assembled, controllably coupled, and coherently operated. Electron
spin qubits created in dopants in semiconductors and color centers in
insulators, for example, can be well controlled individually6-8 but are
difficult to couple together into a circuit. On the other hand, multiple
magnetic atoms and molecules on surfaces can be coupled to each other by
building sophisticated atomic structures using a scanning tunneling microscope
(STM), but coherent operation has so far been limited to a single qubit in the
tunnel junction. Here we demonstrate an atomic-scale qubit platform by showing
atom-by-atom construction, coherent operations, and readout of multiple
electron-spin qubits on a surface. To enable the coherent control of remote
qubits that are outside the tunnel junction, we complement each electron spin
with a local magnetic field gradient from a nearby single-atom magnet. To
enable readout of remote qubits, we employ a sensor qubit in the tunnel
junction and implement pulsed double electron spin resonance. Using these
methods, we demonstrate fast single-, two-, and three-qubit operations in an
all-electrical fashion. Our work marks the creation of an Angstrom-scale qubit
platform, where quantum functionalities using electron spin arrays, built
atom-by-atom on a surface, are now within reach.
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