Switching between relaxation hotspots and coldspots in disordered spin qubits
Amin Hosseinkhani, Guido Burkard

TL;DR
This paper presents a valley-dependent envelope function theory for Si/SiGe quantum dot spin qubits, enabling control over relaxation hotspots and coldspots through interface engineering and electric field tuning, enhancing qubit performance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel valley-dependent envelope function theory that accurately models spin relaxation and demonstrates electrical control over relaxation hotspots and coldspots in disordered spin qubits.
Findings
Theory reproduces experimental spin relaxation times.
Interface steps cause anisotropic relaxation behavior.
Electric field tuning creates tunable relaxation hotspots and coldspots.
Abstract
We develop a valley-dependent envelope function theory that can describe the effects of arbitrary configurations of interface steps and miscuts on the qubit relaxation time. For a given interface roughness, we show how our theory can be used to find the valley-dependent dipole matrix elements, the valley splitting, and the spin-valley coupling as a function of the electromagnetic fields in a Si/SiGe quantum dot spin qubit. We demonstrate that our theory can quantitatively reproduce and explain the result of experimental measurements for the spin relaxation time with only a minimal set of free parameters. Investigating the sample dependence of spin relaxation, we find that at certain conditions for a disordered quantum dot, the spin-valley coupling vanishes. This, in turn, completely blocks the valley-induced qubit decay. We show that the presence of interface steps can in general give…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Advancements in Semiconductor Devices and Circuit Design · Magnetic properties of thin films
