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Room-temperature control and electrical readout of individual nitrogen-vacancy nuclear spins

Physics

Room-temperature control and electrical readout of individual nitrogen-vacancy nuclear spins

M. Gulka, D. Wirtitsch, et al.

Unlock the potential of quantum technologies with room-temperature control and photoelectric readout of a single 14N nuclear spin, coupled to an NV electron. This groundbreaking research by Michal Gulka, Daniel Wirtitsch, and others paves the way for scalable electronic quantum processors.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Nuclear spins in semiconductors are leading candidates for future quantum technologies, including quantum computation, communication, and sensing. Nuclear spins in diamond are particularly attractive due to their long coherence time. With the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre, such nuclear qubits benefit from an auxiliary electronic qubit, which, at cryogenic temperatures, enables probabilistic entanglement mediated optically by photonic links. Here, we demonstrate a concept of a microelectronic quantum device at ambient conditions using diamond as wide bandgap semiconductor. The basic quantum processor unit – a single 14N nuclear spin coupled to the NV electron – is read photoelectrically and thus operates in a manner compatible with nanoscale electronics. The underlying theory provides the key ingredients for photoelectric quantum gate operations and readout of nuclear qubit registers. This demonstration is, therefore, a step towards diamond quantum devices with a readout area limited by inter-electrode distance rather than by the diffraction limit. Such scalability could enable the development of electronic quantum processors based on the dipolar interaction of spin-qubits placed at nanoscopic proximity.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 20, 2021
Authors
Michal Gulka, Daniel Wirtitsch, Viktor Ivády, Jelle Vodnik, Jaroslav Hruby, Goele Magchiels, Emilie Bourgeois, Adam Gali, Michael Trupke, Milos Nesladek
Tags
nuclear spins
semiconductors
quantum technologies
NV centers
room-temperature control
photoelectric readout
quantum processors
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