Reducing charge noise in quantum dots by using thin silicon quantum wells

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Abstract

Charge noise in the host semiconductor degrades the performance of spin-qubits and poses an obstacle to control large quantum processors. However, it is challenging to engineer the heterogeneous material stack of gate-defined quantum dots to improve charge noise systematically. Here, we address the semiconductor-dielectric interface and the buried quantum well of a 28Si/SiGe heterostructure and show the connection between charge noise, measured locally in quantum dots, and global disorder in the host semiconductor, measured with macroscopic Hall bars. In 5 nm thick 28Si quantum wells, we find that improvements in the scattering properties and uniformity of the two-dimensional electron gas over a 100 mm wafer correspond to a significant reduction in charge noise, with a minimum value of 0.29 ± 0.02 μeV/Hz½ at 1 Hz averaged over several quantum dots. We extrapolate the measured charge noise to simulated dephasing times to CZ-gate fidelities that improve nearly one order of magnitude. These results point to a clean and quiet crystalline environment for integrating long-lived and high-fidelity spin qubits into a larger system.

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Paquelet Wuetz, B., Degli Esposti, D., Zwerver, A. M. J., Amitonov, S. V., Botifoll, M., Arbiol, J., … Scappucci, G. (2023). Reducing charge noise in quantum dots by using thin silicon quantum wells. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36951-w

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