Solid-state quantum memory using the 31P nuclear spin

John J. L. Morton*, Alexei M. Tyryshkin, Richard M. Brown, Shyam Shankar, Brendon William Lovett, Arzhang Ardavan, Thomas Schenkel, Eugene E. Haller, Joel W. Ager, S. A. Lyon

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The transfer of information between different physical forms - for example processing entities and memory - is a central theme in communication and computation. This is crucial in quantum computation(1), where great effort(2) must be taken to protect the integrity of a fragile quantum bit ( qubit). However, transfer of quantum information is particularly challenging, as the process must remain coherent at all times to preserve the quantum nature of the information(3). Here we demonstrate the coherent transfer of a superposition state in an electron- spin 'processing' qubit to a nuclear- spin 'memory' qubit, using a combination of microwave and radio- frequency pulses applied to (31)P donors in an isotopically pure (28)Si crystal(4,5). The state is left in the nuclear spin on a time-scale that is long compared with the electron decoherence time, and is then coherently transferred back to the electron spin, thus demonstrating the (31)P nuclear spin as a solid-state quantum memory. The overall store - readout fidelity is about 90 per cent, with the loss attributed to imperfect rotations, and can be improved through the use of composite pulses(6). The coherence lifetime of the quantum memory element at 5.5 K exceeds 1 s.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1085-1088
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume455
Issue number7216
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 23 Oct 2008

Keywords

  • ULTRAFAST PHASE GATES
  • ELECTRON SPIN
  • SILICON
  • QUBITS
  • DECOHERENCE
  • COHERENCE
  • COMPUTER

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