Lifting of Spin Blockade by Charged Impurities in Si-MOS Double Quantum Dot Devices

ORAL

Abstract

Fabricating quantum dots in silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor (MOS) for quantum information processing applications is attractive because of the long spin coherence times in silicon and the potential for leveraging the massive investments that have been made for scaling of the technology for classical electronics. One obstacle that has impeded the development of electrically gated MOS singlet-triplet qubits is the lack of observed spin blockade, where the tunneling of a second electron into a dot is fast when the two-electron state is a singlet and slow when the two-electron state is a triplet, even in samples with large singlet-triplet energy splittings. We show that this is a commonly exhibited problem in MOS double quantum dots, and present evidence that the cause is stray positive charges in the oxide layer inducing accidental dots near the device’s active region that allow spin blockade lifting.

Authors

  • Cameron King

    University of Wisconsin, Madison

  • Joshua Schoenfield

    Univ of California - Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Physics and Astronomy, UCLA; Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

  • M. J. Calder\'{o}n

    CSIC - Madrid, Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid (ICMM-CSIC), Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Madrid, ICMM-CSIC

  • Belita Koiller

    Instituto de F\'{i}sica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janiero

  • Andre Saraiva

    Instituto de F\'{i}sica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janiero, Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro

  • Xuedong Hu

    University at Buffalo, SUNY, State University of New York, Buffalo

  • HongWen Jiang

    Univ of California - Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Physics and Astronomy, UCLA; Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

  • Mark Friesen

    Univ of Wisconsin, Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison, UW-Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • S. N. Coppersmith

    Univ of Wisconsin, Madison, University of Wisconsin, Madison, UW-Madison, University of Wisconsin-Madison