Semiconductor Spin Qubits
Guido Burkard, Thaddeus D. Ladd, John M. Nichol, Andrew Pan, Jason R., Petta

TL;DR
This review covers the physics, recent advances, and future prospects of semiconductor spin qubits, emphasizing their coherence, control, coupling, and scalability in quantum computing applications.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of different spin qubit types, recent experimental progress, and hybrid systems, highlighting key advances in mesoscopic physics and quantum control techniques.
Findings
High-fidelity spin initialization, control, and readout achieved in GaAs, Si, and Ge.
Demonstrated coupling of spin qubits to superconducting circuits and photons.
Insights into noise effects and strategies for coherence preservation.
Abstract
The spin degree of freedom of an electron or a nucleus is one of the most basic properties of nature and functions as an excellent qubit, as it provides a natural two-level system that is insensitive to electric fields, leading to long quantum coherence times. We review the physics of semiconductor spin qubits, focusing not only on the early achievements of spin initialization, control, and readout in GaAs quantum dots, but also on recent advances in Si and Ge spin qubits, including improved charge control and readout, coupling to other quantum degrees of freedom, and scaling to larger system sizes. We begin by introducing the four major types of spin qubits: single spin qubits, donor spin qubits, singlet-triplet spin qubits, and exchange-only spin qubits. We then review the mesoscopic physics of quantum dots, including single-electron charging, valleys, and spin-orbit coupling. We next…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Semiconductor materials and devices · Semiconductor Quantum Structures and Devices
