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Thursday, September 03, 2009
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
T-DO Conference Room

Quantum Lunch

Singlet-triplet qubits in multivalley Si quantum dots

Dimitrie Culcer
University of Maryland

Quantum dot (QD) spins are promising candidates for scalable quantum computation (QC). Electrical readout and control of single spins in QDs have proven challenging, yet GaAs double QDs, where spin blockade and charge sensors enable observation of single/two-spin dynamics, have seen impressive experimental progress. Recent experiments [1] have demonstrated quantum coherence and the use of the two-electron singlet and unpolarized triplet as a qubit, with reliable initialization, single-qubit rotation, and measurement. Yet the hyper ne interaction provides a fundamental limit to spin lifetimes in GaAs, a fact which has spurred intense research into Si QDs. Silicon is often regarded as the best semiconducting host material for spin qubits because of its excellent spin coherence properties: spin-orbit coupling is very small while the hyper ne interaction can be reduced by isotopic enrichment. The biggest obstacle to spin QC in Si is the valley degree of freedom, which I will discuss at length. At the Si/SiO2 interface two valleys are relevant to the ground orbital state, which introduces fundamental complications in distinguishing spin and orbital degrees of freedom. Scattering at the interface lifts the valley degeneracy by producing a valley-orbit coupling , yet the exact form and magnitude of  is generally not known a priori and is sample-dependent. With this in mind we have established the precise criteria for realizing spin qubits in Si QDs [2]. I will show that, for small , a singlet-triplet qubit cannot be constructed since a number of di erent states may be initialized, leading to di erent experimental outcomes. For large valley splitting (  kBT) the experiment is analogous to GaAs. A Zeeman eld can be used to distinguish between di erent initialized states for any valley splitting, and sweeping a uniform magnetic eld provides a useful method for estimating , which is particularly useful when  < kBT. This work is supported by LPS-NSA. [1] J. R. Petta et al, Science 309, 2180 (2005). [2] Dimitrie Culcer, Lukasz Cywinski, Qiuzi Li, Xuedong Hu, and S. Das Sarma, arXiv:0903.0863.

Host: John Singleton