Abstract
Holes in germanium nanowires have emerged as a realistic platform for quantum computing based on spin qubit logic. On top of the large spin-orbit coupling that allows fast qubit operation, nanowire geometry and orientation can be tuned to cancel out charge noise and hyperfine interaction. Here, we demonstrate a scalable approach to synthesize and organize Ge nanowires on silicon (100)-oriented substrates. Germanium nanowire networks are obtained by selectively growing on nanopatterned slits in a metalorganic vapor phase epitaxy system. Low-temperature electronic transport measurements are performed on nanowire Hall bar devices revealing high hole doping of ∼1018cm-3and mean free path of ∼10 nm. Quantum diffusive transport phenomena, universal conductance fluctuations, and weak antilocalization are revealed through magneto transport measurements yielding a coherence and a spin-orbit length of the order of 100 and 10 nm, respectively.
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Ramanandan, S. P., Tomić, P., Morgan, N. P., Giunto, A., Rudra, A., Ensslin, K., … Fontcuberta I Morral, A. (2022). Coherent Hole Transport in Selective Area Grown Ge Nanowire Networks. Nano Letters, 22(10), 4269–4275. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00358
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