Theory of barrier vs tilt exchange gate operations in spin-based quantum computing

April 14th, 2019  |  Published in Featured, Highlights, News, Quantum Computing, Research

  • Why is it better to operate exchange gates by tuning the tunnel gate instead of doing detuning? This paper shows, quantitately, that tunnel gates inflict less susceptibility to charge noise.
  • So if you are making a quantum dot quantum computer, make sure your fast lines are on the barrier gates!

We present a theory for understanding the exchange interaction between electron spins in neighboring quantum dots, either by changing the detuning of the two quantum dots or independently tuning the tunneling barrier between quantum dots. The Hubbard model and a more realistic confining-potential model are used to investigate how the tilting and barrier control affect the effective exchange coupling and thus the gate fidelity in both the detuning and symmetric regimes. We show that the exchange coupling is less sensitive to the charge noise through tunnel barrier control (while allowing for exchange coupling operations on a sweet spot where the exchange interaction has zero derivative with respect to the detuning). Both GaAs and Si quantum dots are considered and we compare our results with experimental data showing qualitative agreements. Our results answer the open question of why barrier gates are preferable to tilt gates for exchange-base gate operations.

Phys. Rev. B 97, 155402 (2018) | arxiv.org

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