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Bell-state tomography in a silicon many-electron artificial molecule

ORAL

Abstract

An error-corrected quantum processor will require millions of qubits, accentuating the advantage of nanoscale devices with small footprints, such as silicon quantum dots. However, as for every device with nanoscale dimensions, disorder at the atomic level is detrimental to qubit uniformity. Here we investigate two spin qubits confined in a silicon double quantum-dot artificial molecule. Each quantum dot has a robust shell structure and, when operated at an occupancy of 5 or 13 electrons, has single spin-½ valence electron in its p- or d-orbital, respectively. These higher electron occupancies screen atomic-level disorder. The larger multielectron wavefunctions also enable significant overlap between neighbouring qubit electrons, while making space for an interstitial exchange-gate electrode. We implement a universal gate set using the magnetic field gradient of a micromagnet for electrically-driven single qubit gates, and a gate-voltage-controlled inter-dot barrier to perform two-qubit gates by pulsed exchange coupling. We use this gate set to demonstrate a Bell state preparation between multielectron qubits with fidelity 90.3%, confirmed by two-qubit state tomography using spin parity measurements.

Presenters

  • Ross C C Leon

    Univ of New South Wales

Authors

  • Ross C C Leon

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Chih Hwan Yang

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Jason Hwang

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Julien Camirand Lemyre

    Universite de Sherbrooke

  • Tuomo Tanttu

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Wei Huang

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Jonathan Y Huang

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Kohei M Itoh

    Keio University, Keio Univ

  • Arne Laucht

    Univ of New South Wales, The University of New South Wales

  • Michel Pioro-Ladriere

    Institut quantique, Université de Sherbrooke, Physics, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada, Universite de Sherbrooke

  • Andre Saraiva

    Univ of New South Wales

  • Andrew Steven Dzurak

    Univ of New South Wales