4.6 Article

Modular nanomagnet design for spin qubits confined in a linear chain

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 122, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0139670

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On-chip micromagnets are used for electrically controlled quantum gates on electron spin qubits. A design is presented for driving spin qubits arranged in a linear chain and strongly confined in directions lateral to the chain. The concept is validated using micromagnetic simulations and spin-polarized scanning electron microscopy of Fe nanomagnets. The design meets several requirements for a scalable spin qubit design.
On-chip micromagnets enable electrically controlled quantum gates on electron spin qubits. Extending the concept to a large number of qubits is challenging in terms of providing large enough driving gradients and individual addressability. Here we present a design aimed at driving spin qubits arranged in a linear chain and strongly confined in directions lateral to the chain. Nanomagnets are placed laterally to one side of the qubit chain, one nanomagnet per two qubits. The individual magnets are U-shaped, such that the magnetic shape anisotropy orients the magnetization alternately towards and against the qubit chain even if an external magnetic field is applied along the qubit chain. The longitudinal and transversal stray field components serve as addressability and driving fields. Using micromagnetic simulations we calculate driving and dephasing rates and the corresponding qubit quality factor. The concept is validated with spin-polarized scanning electron microscopy of Fe nanomagnets fabricated on silicon substrates, finding excellent agreement with micromagnetic simulations. Several features required for a scalable spin qubit design are met in our approach: strong driving and weak dephasing gradients, reduced crosstalk and operation at low external magnetic field.

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