4.8 Article

Precision tomography of a three-qubit donor quantum processor in silicon

Journal

NATURE
Volume 601, Issue 7893, Pages 348-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04292-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [CE170100012]
  2. US Army Research Office [W911NF-17-1-0200]
  3. Australian Department of Industry, Innovation and Science [AUSMURI000002]
  4. Australian National Fabrication Facility (ANFF)
  5. iHPC facility at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS)
  6. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research
  7. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers (Quantum Systems Accelerator)
  8. US Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration [DE-NA0003525]

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This study demonstrates universal quantum logic operations using nuclear spins in a silicon nanoelectronic device, achieving high-fidelity entangled states. The precise characterization of quantum operations shows that nuclear spins are approaching the performance required for fault-tolerant quantum processors. Additionally, the entanglement between nuclear spins and electron spins is also demonstrated. The results establish a viable route for scalable quantum information processing using donor nuclear and electron spins.
Nuclear spins were among the first physical platforms to be considered for quantum information processing(1,2), because of their exceptional quantum coherence(3) and atomic-scale footprint. However, their full potential for quantum computing has not yet been realized, owing to the lack of methods with which to link nuclear qubits within a scalable device combined with multi-qubit operations with sufficient fidelity to sustain fault-tolerant quantum computation. Here we demonstrate universal quantum logic operations using a pair of ion-implanted P-31 donor nuclei in a silicon nanoelectronic device. A nuclear two-qubit controlled-Z gate is obtained by imparting a geometric phase to a shared electron spin(4), and used to prepare entangled Bell states with fidelities up to 94.2(2.7)%. The quantum operations are precisely characterized using gate set tomography (GST)(5), yielding one-qubit average gate fidelities up to 99.95(2)%, two-qubit average gate fidelity of 99.37(11)% and two-qubit preparation/measurement fidelities of 98.95(4)%. These three metrics indicate that nuclear spins in silicon are approaching the performance demanded in fault-tolerant quantum processors(6). We then demonstrate entanglement between the two nuclei and the shared electron by producing a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger three-qubit state with 92.5(1.0)% fidelity. Because electron spin qubits in semiconductors can be further coupled to other electrons(7-9) or physically shuttled across different locations(10,11), these results establish a viable route for scalable quantum information processing using donor nuclear and electron spins.

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