A Quantum Computer Based on Donor-Cluster Arrays in Silicon
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2509.24749v2
- Date: Fri, 03 Oct 2025 08:32:30 GMT
- Title: A Quantum Computer Based on Donor-Cluster Arrays in Silicon
- Authors: Shihang Zhang, Chunhui Zhang, Guanyong Wang, Tao Xin, Guangchong Hu, Yu He, Peihao Huang,
- Abstract summary: Phosphorus (P)-doped spin qubits possess excellent coherence and have demonstrated high-fidelity two-qubit gates exceeding 99.9%.<n>We propose a scalable cluster-array architecture for nuclear spin qubits and a corresponding control protocol.
- Score: 22.78992041730778
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Significant advances in silicon spin qubits highlight the potential of silicon quantum dots for scalable quantum computing, given their compatibility with industrial fabrication and long coherence times. In particular, phosphorus (P)-doped spin qubits possess excellent coherence and have demonstrated high-fidelity two-qubit gates exceeding 99.9%. However, scaling P-donor systems is challenging due to crosstalk caused by the uniformity of individual P donors and the low tolerance for imprecise atomic placement. Stochastic placement can lead to multiple donors located within a small region (diameter <3 nm), forming a so-called donor cluster. Notably, in cluster-based systems, high-fidelity multi-qubit quantum gates and all-to-all connectivity have recently been demonstrated experimentally on nuclear spin qubits. In this work, we propose a scalable cluster-array architecture for nuclear spin qubits and a corresponding control protocol. We analyze crosstalk-induced errors, a major error source, during primitive operations under various parameters, showing that they can be suppressed through device design and control optimization. We evaluate the fidelities of intra- and inter-cluster multi-qubit gates between nuclear spins, confirming the feasibility of our architecture and establishing design requirements and parameter targets. The local all-to-all connectivity within clusters provides unique flexibility for quantum error correction. Our scalable scheme provides a path toward large-scale spin-based quantum processors.
Related papers
- Towards Quantum Enhanced Adversarial Robustness with Rydberg Reservoir Learning [45.92935470813908]
Quantum computing reservoir (QRC) leverages the high-dimensional, nonlinear dynamics inherent in quantum many-body systems.<n>Recent studies indicate that perturbation quantums based on variational circuits remain susceptible to adversarials.<n>We investigate the first systematic evaluation of adversarial robustness in a QR based learning model.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-10-15T12:17:23Z) - Dual-type dual-element atom arrays for quantum information processing [4.576714355493591]
We propose a novel quantum processing architecture based on dual-type, dual-element atom arrays.<n>We demonstrate ensemble-assisted quantum operations that enable reconfigurable, high-speed control of individual data qubits.<n>Our scheme supports individually addressable single- and multi-qubit operations with fidelities of 99.5% and 99.9%, respectively.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-03-21T07:00:35Z) - Extending Quantum Perceptrons: Rydberg Devices, Multi-Class Classification, and Error Tolerance [67.77677387243135]
Quantum Neuromorphic Computing (QNC) merges quantum computation with neural computation to create scalable, noise-resilient algorithms for quantum machine learning (QML)
At the core of QNC is the quantum perceptron (QP), which leverages the analog dynamics of interacting qubits to enable universal quantum computation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-11-13T23:56:20Z) - Universal high-fidelity quantum gates for spin-qubits in diamond [0.0]
Recent experiments have demonstrated multi-qubit quantum processors, optical interconnects, and basic quantum error correction protocols.
One of the key open challenges towards larger-scale systems is to realize high-fidelity universal quantum gates.
We design and demonstrate a complete high-fidelity gate set for the two-qubit system formed by the electron and nuclear spin of a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-03-15T19:00:02Z) - Heterogeneous integration of spin-photon interfaces with a scalable CMOS
platform [1.2253948665073315]
General-purpose quantum computing using local quantum communication networks will require millions of physical qubits to encode thousands of logical qubits.
We introduce a scalable hardware modular architecture "Quantum System-on-Chip" (QSoC)
QSoC features compact two-dimensional arrays "quantum microchiplets" (QMCs) containing tin-vacancy (SnV-) spin qubits integrated on a cryogenic application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC)
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-08-28T04:06:11Z) - Precise control of entanglement in multinuclear spin registers coupled
to defects [0.0]
Quantum networks play an indispensable role in quantum information tasks such as secure communications, enhanced quantum sensing, and distributed computing.
Among the most mature and promising platforms for quantum networking are nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond and other color centers in solids.
One of the challenges in using these systems for networking applications is to controllably manipulate entanglement between the electron and the nuclear spin register.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-03-17T17:20:54Z) - A quantum processor based on coherent transport of entangled atom arrays [44.62475518267084]
We show a quantum processor with dynamic, nonlocal connectivity, in which entangled qubits are coherently transported in a highly parallel manner.
We use this architecture to realize programmable generation of entangled graph states such as cluster states and a 7-qubit Steane code state.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-12-07T19:00:00Z) - Universal quantum computation with symmetric qubit clusters coupled to
an environment [0.3670422696827526]
We propose a scalable scheme for universal quantum computation where cores play the role of quantum-computational transistors, quansistors.
We include quantum errors as a main source of decoherence, and show that symmetry makes logical operations particularly resilient to untimely anisotropic qubit rotations.
Many of our results can be generalized to higher-level omega-rotation-invariant systems, or adapted to clusters with other symmetries.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-06-01T19:59:41Z) - Hardware-Efficient, Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computation with Rydberg
Atoms [55.41644538483948]
We provide the first complete characterization of sources of error in a neutral-atom quantum computer.
We develop a novel and distinctly efficient method to address the most important errors associated with the decay of atomic qubits to states outside of the computational subspace.
Our protocols can be implemented in the near-term using state-of-the-art neutral atom platforms with qubits encoded in both alkali and alkaline-earth atoms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-27T23:29:53Z) - Multidimensional cluster states using a single spin-photon interface
coupled strongly to an intrinsic nuclear register [48.7576911714538]
Photonic cluster states are a powerful resource for measurement-based quantum computing and loss-tolerant quantum communication.
We propose the generation of multi-dimensional lattice cluster states using a single, efficient spin-photon interface coupled strongly to a nuclear register.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-04-26T14:41:01Z) - Hardware-efficient error-correcting codes for large nuclear spins [62.997667081978825]
We present a hardware-efficient quantum protocol that corrects phase flips of a nuclear spin using explicit experimentally feasible operations.
Results provide a realizable blueprint for a corrected spin-based qubit.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-03-15T17:14:48Z) - Universal quantum computation and quantum error correction with
ultracold atomic mixtures [47.187609203210705]
We propose a mixture of two ultracold atomic species as a platform for universal quantum computation with long-range entangling gates.
One atomic species realizes localized collective spins of tunable length, which form the fundamental unit of information.
We discuss a finite-dimensional version of the Gottesman-Kitaev-Preskill code to protect quantum information encoded in the collective spins.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-29T20:17:14Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.