Single-Atom Control of Arsenic Incorporation in Silicon for High-Yield Artificial Lattice Fabrication

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Abstract

Artificial lattices constructed from individual dopant atoms within a semiconductor crystal hold promise to provide novel materials with tailored electronic, magnetic, and optical properties. These custom-engineered lattices are anticipated to enable new, fundamental discoveries in condensed matter physics and lead to the creation of new semiconductor technologies including analog quantum simulators and universal solid-state quantum computers. This work reports precise and repeatable, substitutional incorporation of single arsenic atoms into a silicon lattice. A combination of scanning tunneling microscopy hydrogen resist lithography and a detailed statistical exploration of the chemistry of arsine on the hydrogen-terminated silicon (001) surface are employed to show that single arsenic dopants can be deterministically placed within four silicon lattice sites and incorporated with 97 ± 2% yield. These findings bring closer to the ultimate frontier in semiconductor technology: the deterministic assembly of atomically precise dopant and qubit arrays at arbitrarily large scales.

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Stock, T. J. Z., Warschkow, O., Constantinou, P. C., Bowler, D. R., Schofield, S. R., & Curson, N. J. (2024). Single-Atom Control of Arsenic Incorporation in Silicon for High-Yield Artificial Lattice Fabrication. Advanced Materials, 36(24). https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202312282

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