4.6 Article

Self-aligned gates for scalable silicon quantum computing

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 118, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0036520

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss Nanoscience Institute (SNI)
  2. NCCR SPIN
  3. Georg H. Endress Foundation
  4. Swiss NSF [179024]
  5. EU H2020 European Microkelvin Platform EMP [824109]

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Silicon quantum dot spin qubits have great potential for application in large-scale quantum circuits, but additional gates add to device complexity. By demonstrating the scalable integration of a multilayer gate stack in silicon quantum dot devices using self-alignment, the possibility of fast, all-electrical qubit control in the future is paved.
Silicon quantum dot spin qubits have great potential for application in large-scale quantum circuits as they share many similarities with conventional transistors that represent the prototypical example for scalable electronic platforms. However, for quantum dot formation and control, additional gates are required, which add to device complexity and, thus, hinder upscaling. Here, we meet this challenge by demonstrating the scalable integration of a multilayer gate stack in silicon quantum dot devices using self-alignment, which allows for ultrasmall gate lengths and intrinsically perfect layer-to-layer alignment. We explore the prospects of these devices as hosts for hole spin qubits that benefit from electrically driven spin control via spin-orbit interaction. Therefore, we study hole transport through a double quantum dot and observe current rectification due to the Pauli spin blockade. The application of a small magnetic field leads to lifting of the spin blockade and reveals the presence of spin-orbit interaction. From the magnitude of a singlet-triplet anticrossing at a high magnetic field, we estimate a spin orbit energy of similar to 37 mu eV, which corresponds to a spin orbit length of similar to 48nm. This work paves the way for scalable spin- based quantum circuits with fast, all-electrical qubit control. Published under license by AIP Publishing.

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