Nature Nanotechnology

Coherent control of individual electron spins in a two-dimensional quantum dot array (9 dots)

Abstract

The ability to manipulate coherently individual quantum objects organized in arrays is a prerequisite to any scalable quantum information platform. For electron spin qubits, it requires the fine tuning of large arrays of tunnel-coupled quantum dots. The cumulated efforts in linear dot arrays have permitted the recent realization of quantum simulators and multi-electron spin coherent manipulation. However, the two-dimensional scaling of such implementations remains undemonstrated while being compulsory to resolve complex quantum matter problems or process quantum information. Here, we demonstrate the two-dimensional coherent control of individual electron spins in a 3×3 array of tunnel-coupled quantum dots. More specifically, we focus on several key quantum functionalities of such control: charge deterministic displacement, local spin readout, local coherent exchange manipulation between two electron spins trapped in adjacent dots, and coherent multi-directional spin shuttling over distances of several microns. This work lays the foundations for exploiting a two-dimensional array of electron spins for quantum simulation and information processing.

Read more

Author(s)

Tristan Meunier

CTO & co-founder

All authors

Pierre-Andre Mortemousque, Emmanuel Chanrion, Baptiste Jadot, Hanno Flentje, Arne Ludwig, Andreas D. Wieck, Matias Urdampilleta, Christopher Bauerle, Tristan Meunier