Single-electron regime and Pauli spin blockade in a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor double quantum dot

ORAL

Abstract

Silicon quantum dots are promising candidates for quantum information processing as spin qubits with long coherence time. We present electrical transport measurements on a silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) double quantum dot (DQD). First, Coulomb diamonds measurements demonstrate the one-electron regime at a relatively high temperature of 1.5 K. Then, the 8 mK stability diagram shows Pauli spin blockade with a large singlet-triplet separation of approximatively 0.40 meV, pointing towards a strong lifting of the valley degeneracy. Finally, numerical simulations indicate that by integrating a micro-magnet to those devices, we could achieve fast spin rotations of the order of 30 ns. Those results are part of the recent body of work demonstrating the potential of Si MOS DQD as reliable and long-lived spin qubits that could be ultimately integrated into modern electronic facilities.

Authors

  • Sophie Rochette

    Universit\'{e} de Sherbrooke

  • Greg Ten Eyck

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Tammy Pluym

    Sandia National Laboratories

  • Michael Lilly

    Sandia Natl Labs, Sandia National Laboratories

  • Malcolm Carroll

    Sandia Natl Labs, Sandia National Laboratories

  • Michel Pioro-Ladri\`{e}re

    Universit\'{e} de Sherbrooke