Although silicon is a promising material for quantum computation, the degeneracy of the conduction band minima (valleys) must be lifted with a splitting sufficient to ensure the formation of well-defined and long-lived spin qubits. Here we demonstrate that valley separation can be accurately tuned via electrostatic gate control in a metal-oxide-semiconductor quantum dot, providing splittings spanning 0.3-0.8 meV. The splitting varies linearly with applied electric field, with a ratio in agreement with atomistic tight-binding predictions. We demonstrate single-shot spin read-out and measure the spin relaxation for different valley configurations and dot occupancies, finding one-electron lifetimes exceeding 2 s. Spin relaxation occurs via phonon emission due to spin-orbit coupling between the valley states, a process not previously anticipated for silicon quantum dots. An analytical theory describes the magnetic field dependence of the relaxation rate, including the presence of a dramatic rate enhancement (or hot-spot) when Zeeman and valley splittings coincide. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Yang, C. H., Rossi, A., Ruskov, R., Lai, N. S., Mohiyaddin, F. A., Lee, S., … Dzurak, A. S. (2013). Spin-valley lifetimes in a silicon quantum dot with tunable valley splitting. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3069
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.