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ESE Seminar: “Engineering Quantum Processors in Silicon”

February 27, 2020 at 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Details
Date: February 27, 2020
Time: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Event Category: Colloquium
  • Event Tags:
  • Organizer
    Electrical and Systems Engineering
    Phone: 215-898-6823
    Venue
    Room 337, Towne Building 220 South 33rd Street
    Philadelphia
    PA 19104
    Google Map

    Abstract
    Across the globe, physicists in academia and industry alike are competing to be the first to build a scalable universal quantum computer. Amongst the multitudes of quantum computing architectures, solid-state quantum processors based on spins in silicon are emerging as a strong contender. Silicon is an ideal material to host spin qubits: it supports long coherence times [1], has excellent prospects for scaling, and is ubiquitous in the semiconductor industry. While semiconductor spin qubits were proposed over two decades ago [2], it is only within the past few years that we have learned how to fabricate and control multi-qubit devices in silicon.

    In this seminar, I will describe our state-of-the-art four-qubit Si/SiGe quantum dot device [3] and explain how we have overcome major barriers to realizing large-scale quantum computing in silicon. First, I will discuss charge control and spin-state readout in the device. Then, I will describe the use of an on-chip micromagnet to mediate electrically driven spin resonance [4-5]. Using this technique, we achieve site-selective spin control with fidelities exceeding 99.9%. I will outline the operation of our three primitive two-qubit gates: the decoupled-CZ gate [4], the resonant CNOT gate [5], and the resonant SWAP gate [6]. Finally, I will discuss how these advances enable the development of large-scale quantum processors capable of complex quantum information processing.

    References:
    [1] Tyryshkin et al., Nature Mat. 11, 143 (2011)
    [2] Loss and Divincenzo, Phys. Rev. A 57, 120 (1998)
    [3] Sigillito et al., Phys. Rev. Applied 11, 061006 (2019)
    [4] Watson et al., Nature 555, 633 (2018)
    [5] Zajac, Sigillito, et al., Science 359, 439 (2018)
    [6] Sigillito et al., npj Quantum Information 5, 110 (2019)