4.8 Article

Decoherence-protected quantum gates for a hybrid solid-state spin register

Journal

NATURE
Volume 484, Issue 7392, Pages 82-86

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10900

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Organization for Fundamental Research on Matter
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
  3. DARPA QuEST
  4. AFOSR
  5. ARO MURI
  6. National Science Foundation [CHM-924318, CHM-1037992, PHY-0969969]
  7. ARO MURI [W911NF-11-1-0268]
  8. US Department of Defense
  9. Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-07CH11358]
  10. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  11. Division Of Chemistry [1037992] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  12. Division Of Chemistry
  13. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0924318] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  14. Division Of Physics
  15. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [969969] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Protecting the dynamics of coupled quantum systems from decoherence by the environment is a key challenge for solid-state quantum information processing(1,2). An idle quantum bit (qubit) can be efficiently insulated from the outside world by dynamical decoupling(3), as has recently been demonstrated for individual solid-state qubits(4-9). However, protecting qubit coherence during a multi-qubit gate is a non-trivial problem(3,10,11): in general, the decoupling disrupts the interqubit dynamics and hence conflicts with gate operation. This problem is particularly salient for hybrid systems(12-22), in which different types of qubit evolve and decohere at very different rates. Here we present the integration of dynamical decoupling into quantum gates for a standard hybrid system, the electron-nuclear spin register. Our design harnesses the internal resonance in the coupled-spin system to resolve the conflict between gate operation and decoupling. We experimentally demonstrate these gates using a two-qubit register in diamond operating at room temperature. Quantum tomography reveals that the qubits involved in the gate operation are protected as accurately as idle qubits. We also perform Grover's quantum search algorithm(1), and achieve fidelities of more than 90% even though the algorithm run-time exceeds the electron spin dephasing time by two orders of magnitude. Our results directly allow decoherence-protected interface gates between different types of solid-state qubit. Ultimately, quantum gates with integrated decoupling may reach the accuracy threshold for fault-tolerant quantum information processing with solid-state devices(1,11).

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