Long-distance spin-spin coupling via floating gates

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Abstract

The electron spin is a natural two-level system that allows a qubit to be encoded. When localized in a gate-defined quantum dot, the electron spin provides a promising platform for a future functional quantum computer. The essential ingredient of any quantum computer is entanglement-for the case of electronspin qubits considered here-commonly achieved via the exchange interaction. Nevertheless, there is an immense challenge as to how to scale the system up to include many qubits. In this paper, we propose a novel architecture of a large-scale quantum computer based on a realization of long-distance quantum gates between electron spins localized in quantum dots. The crucial ingredients of such a long-distance coupling are floating metallic gates that mediate electrostatic coupling over large distances. We show, both analytically and numerically, that distant electron spins in an array of quantum dots can be coupled selectively, with coupling strengths that are larger than the electron-spin decay and with switching times on the order of nanoseconds.

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Trifunovic, L., Dial, O., Trif, M., Wootton, J. R., Abebe, R., Yacoby, A., & Loss, D. (2012). Long-distance spin-spin coupling via floating gates. Physical Review X, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.2.011006

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