Optimisation of electrically-driven multi-donor quantum dot qubits
Abhikbrata Sarkar, Joel Hochstetter, Allen Kha, Xuedong Hu, Michelle, Y. Simmons, Rajib Rahman, Dimitrie Culcer

TL;DR
This paper investigates the electrical control and coherence of multi-donor quantum dot qubits, revealing optimal geometries for fast operation and robustness against noise, advancing scalable quantum computing with silicon-based qubits.
Contribution
It introduces a variational effective mass wave-function to analyze the impact of geometry and charge defects on $2P:1P$ qubits, providing insights for optimizing qubit performance.
Findings
Fast EDSR with $T_\pi \sim 10-50$ ns and high Rabi ratio.
Optimal qubit axis alignment for speed and coherence.
Sensitivity of qubits to charge noise depends on defect location.
Abstract
Multi-donor quantum dots have been at the forefront of recent progress in Si-based quantum computation. Among them, qubits have a built-in dipole moment, enabling all-electrical spin operation via hyperfine mediated electron dipole spin resonance (EDSR). The development of all-electrical multi-donor dot qubits requires a full understanding of their EDSR and coherence properties, incorporating multi-valley nature of their ground state. Here, by introducing a variational effective mass wave-function, we examine the impact of qubit geometry and nearby charge defects on the electrical operation and coherence of qubits. We report four outcomes: (i) The difference in the hyperfine interaction between the and sites enables fast EDSR, with ns and a Rabi ratio . We analyse qubits with the axis aligned along the [100],…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Semiconductor Quantum Structures and Devices · Semiconductor materials and devices
