Formation of Shallow Indium Donor Qubits in ZnO via Ion Implantation
ORAL
Abstract
The indium substitutional donor (In0Zn) in ZnO is an emerging semiconductor spin qubit with optical access via the donor-bound exciton (In0ZnX). In this work, we controllably introduce In0Zn into ZnO as a donor via ion implantation and post-implantation annealing. The inhomogeneous optical linewidths for the implanted In0ZnX transition is 7 GHz at 2 K, comparable to what is observed for in-grown In0Zn ensembles in commercially-available ZnO single crystals, and only 20 times broader than the lifetime-limited linewidth. The longitudinal spin relaxation time (T1) of implanted In0Zn is measured to be 4 ms at 7 T, four times longer than what has been found for in-grown Ga donors in our previous work [1]. T1 increases with decreasing magnetic field following the expected inverse power-law [2]. Optical pumping and coherent control of the implanted In0Zn is shown using two resonant lasers at 7 T. All-optical coherent control is demonstrated via coherent population trapping (CPT). The CPT signature observed at low excitation powers indicates the presence of ten distinct features, as expected due to the strong hyperfine interaction between the electron bound to In0Zn and the In nuclei (spin = 9/2). Our results indicate that for implanted In0Zn access of nuclear spin degrees of freedom for quantum memories may be achievable.
[1] Xiayu Linpeng, et. al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 10, 064061 (2018).
[2] Vasileios Niaouris, et. al., Phys. Rev. B 105, 195202 (2022).
[1] Xiayu Linpeng, et. al., Phys. Rev. Appl. 10, 064061 (2018).
[2] Vasileios Niaouris, et. al., Phys. Rev. B 105, 195202 (2022).
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Presenters
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Xingyi Wang
University of Washington
Authors
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Xingyi Wang
University of Washington
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Christian Zimmermann
Department of Physics, University of Washington
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Michael Titze
Sandia National Laboratories
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Lasse Vines
Department of Physics, University of Oslo
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Vasileios Niaouris
Department of Physics, University of Washington
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Samuel H D’Ambrosia
University of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington
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Ethan Hansen
University of Washington, Department of Physics, University of Washington
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Edward S Bielejec
Sandia National Laboratories
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Kai-Mei C Fu
University of Washington