Aussie researchers develop electrically driven single-atom 'flip-flop' qubit


Thursday, 16 February, 2023

Aussie researchers develop electrically driven single-atom 'flip-flop' qubit

A team led by Professor Andrea Morello has demonstrated the operation of a new type of quantum bit, called a ‘flip-flop’ qubit, which combines the exquisite quantum properties of single atoms with easy controllability using electric signals, just as those used in ordinary computer chips. Morello said that unlike previous qubits, this was discovered “by design”, as his team of researchers wanted something that could be controlled electrically, for ease of operation.

Morello’s group is reportedly the first to demonstrate that using the spin of an electron as well as the nuclear spin of a single phosphorous atom in silicon could be used as ‘qubits’ — units of information that are used to make quantum computing calculations. Morello said that while both qubits perform well on their own, they require oscillating magnetic fields for their operation.

“Magnetic fields are difficult to localise at the nanometre scale, which is the typical size of the individual quantum computer components. This is why the very first proposal for a silicon quantum bit envisaged having all the qubits immersed in a uniform oscillating magnetic field, applied across the whole chip, and then using local electric fields to select which qubit gets operated,” Morello said.

A few years ago, Morello’s team found that defining the qubit as the combined up-down/down-up orientation of the electron and the nucleus of the atom would permit controlling such qubits using the electric fields alone. The recent finding is the experimental demonstration of that idea. Doctor Rostyslav Savytskyy, one of the lead experimental authors of the paper, published in Science Advances, said the new qubit is called ‘flip-flop’ because it’s made out of two spins belonging to the same atom — the electron and the nuclear spin — with the condition that they always point in opposite directions.

“For example, if the ‘0’ state is ‘electron-down/nucleus -up’ and the ‘1’ state is ‘electron-up/nucleus-down’, changing from ‘0’ to ‘1’ means that the electron ‘flips’ up and the nucleus ‘flops’ down. Hence the name!” Savytskyy said.

Sketch of the silicon nanoelectronic device that hosts the 'flip-flop' qubit. The nuclear spin (“n”, in orange) and the electron spin (“e”, in blue) flip-flop with respect to each other while always pointing in opposite directions. Image credit: UNSW

The theory predicted that by displacing the electron with respect to the nucleus, one could program arbitrary quantum states of the flip-flop qubit. Doctor Tim Botzem, another lead experimental author, said the experiment confirms that prediction with accuracy. “Most importantly, such electron displacement is obtained simply by applying a voltage to a small metallic electrode, instead of irradiating the chip with an oscillating magnetic field. It’s a method that much more closely resembles the type of electrical signal normally routed within conventional silicon computer chips, as we use every day in our computers and smartphones,” Botzem said.

The electrical control of the ‘flip-flop’ qubit by displacing the electron from the nucleus is accompanied by a side effect; when a negative charge (the electron) is displaced away from a positive charge (the nucleus), an electric dipole is formed. Placing two (or more) electric dipoles in each other’s proximity gives rise to a strong electrical coupling between them, which can mediate multi-qubit quantum logic operations required to perform useful quantum computations.

Experimental measurement of the probability of finding the nuclear and the electron spins pointing ‘up’. The data   clearly shows the flip-flopping dynamics, where the two spins swap orientation multiple times as the electrical driving signal is progressively applied. Image credit: UNSW

According to Morello, the standard way to couple spin qubits in silicon is by placing the electrons so close to each other that they effectively ‘touch’. “This requires the qubits to be placed on a grid of a few 10s of nanometres in pitch. The engineering challenges in doing so are quite severe. In contrast, electric dipoles don’t need to ‘touch’ each other — they influence each other from the distance. Our theory indicates that 200 nanometres is the optimal distance for fast and high-fidelity quantum operations. This could be a game-changing development, because 200 nanometres is far enough to allow inserting various control and readout devices in between the qubits, making the processor easier to wire up and operate,” Morello said.

Top image caption: Dr Tim Botzem, Professor Andrea Morello and Dr Rostyslav Savytskyy in the quantum computing lab at UNSW Sydney. Image credit: Richard Freeman/UNSW

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