Tomography of entangling two-qubit logic operations in exchange-coupled donor electron spin qubits

  • Holly Stemp (Creator)
  • Serwan Asaad (Creator)
  • Mark van Blankenstein (Creator)
  • Arjen Vaartjes (Creator)
  • Mark Johnson (Creator)
  • Mateusz Madzik (Creator)
  • Amber Heskes (Creator)
  • Hannes Firgau (Creator)
  • Rocky Su (Creator)
  • Chih Hwan Yang (Creator)
  • Arne Laucht (Creator)
  • Corey Ostrove (Creator)
  • Kenneth Rudinger (Creator)
  • Kevin Young (Creator)
  • Robin Blume-Kohout (Creator)
  • Fay Hudson (Creator)
  • Andrew S. Dzurak (Creator)
  • Kohei Itoh (Creator)
  • Alexander Jakob (Creator)
  • Brett Johnson (Creator)
  • David Jamieson (Creator)
  • Andrea Morello (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Scalable quantum processors require high-fidelity universal quantum logic operations in a manufacturable physical platform. Donors in silicon provide atomic size, excellent quantum coherence and compatibility with standard semiconductor processing, but no entanglement between donor-bound electron spins has been demonstrated to date. Here we present the experimental demonstration and tomography of universal 1- and 2-qubit gates in a system of two weakly exchange-coupled electrons, bound to single phosphorus donors introduced in silicon by ion implantation. We surprisingly observe that the exchange interaction has no effect on the qubit coherence. We quantify the fidelity of the quantum operations using gate set tomography (GST), and we use the universal gate set to create entangled Bell states of the electrons spins, with fidelity ≈ 93%, and concurrence 0.91 ± 0.08. These results form the necessary basis for scaling up donor-based quantum computers.
Date made available13 Mar 2024
PublisherZenodo

Cite this