Recipes for spin-based quantum computing
Veronica Cerletti, W. A. Coish, Oliver Gywat, Daniel Loss

TL;DR
This paper reviews the development of spin-based quantum computing in solid-state systems, focusing on theoretical proposals, challenges, and recent experimental progress with quantum dots.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of spintronic quantum computing, highlighting the Loss-DiVincenzo proposal and recent advances in the field.
Findings
Progress in theoretical models for spin-based quantum computers.
Experimental demonstrations of spin control in quantum dots.
Identification of key challenges and future experiments.
Abstract
Technological growth in the electronics industry has historically been measured by the number of transistors that can be crammed onto a single microchip. Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end; spectacular growth in the number of transistors on a chip requires spectacular reduction of the transistor size. For electrons in semiconductors, the laws of quantum mechanics take over at the nanometre scale, and the conventional wisdom for progress (transistor cramming) must be abandoned. This realization has stimulated extensive research on ways to exploit the spin (in addition to the orbital) degree of freedom of the electron, giving birth to the field of spintronics. Perhaps the most ambitious goal of spintronics is to realize complete control over the quantum mechanical nature of the relevant spins. This prospect has motivated a race to design and build a spintronic device…
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