Qubits that operate at room temperature

Phys.org  March 17, 2020
Defect-based quantum systems are often complicated by charge-state instabilities and interference by phonons, which can diminish spin-initialization fidelities and limit room-temperature operation. An international team of researchers (Hungary, Sweden, USA – Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago, IBM, Russia) identified a pathway around these drawbacks by showing that an engineered quantum well can stabilize the charge state of a qubit. They constructed a model for previously unattributed point defect centers in silicon carbide as a near-stacking fault axial divacancy and show how this model explains these defects’ robustness against photoionization and room temperature stability. These results provide a materials-based solution to the optical instability of color centers in semiconductors, paving the way for the development of robust single-photon sources and spin qubits…read more. Open Access TECHNICAL ARTICLE

Qubit illustration. Credit: esa.int

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