TY - JOUR
T1 - High-fidelity single-spin shuttling in silicon
AU - De Smet, Maxim
AU - Matsumoto, Yuta
AU - Zwerver, Anne Marije J.
AU - Tryputen, Larysa
AU - de Snoo, Sander L.
AU - Amitonov, Sergey V.
AU - Sammak, Amir
AU - Samkharadze, Nodar
AU - Gül, Önder
AU - Greplová, Eliška
AU - Rimbach-Russ, Maximilian
AU - Scappucci, Giordano
AU - Vandersypen, Lieven M.K.
AU - More Authors, null
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The computational power and fault tolerance of future large-scale quantum processors derive in large part from the connectivity between the qubits. One approach to increase connectivity is to engineer qubit–qubit interactions at a distance. Alternatively, the connectivity can be increased by physically displacing the qubits. For semiconductor spin qubits, several studies have investigated spin coherent shuttling of individual electrons, but high-fidelity transport over extended distances remains to be demonstrated. Here we report shuttling of an electron inside an isotopically purified Si/SiGe heterostructure using electric gate potentials. In a first set of experiments, we form static quantum dots and study how spin coherence decays during bucket-brigade shuttling, where we repeatedly move a single electron between up to five dots. Next, for conveyor-mode shuttling, we create a travelling-wave potential, formed with either one or two sets of sine waves, to transport an electron in a moving quantum dot. This method shows a spin coherence an order of magnitude better than the bucket-brigade shuttling. It allows us to displace an electron over an effective distance of 10 μm in under 200 ns while preserving the spin state with a fidelity of 99.5% on average. These results will guide future efforts to realize large-scale semiconductor quantum processors, making use of electron shuttling both within and between qubit arrays.
AB - The computational power and fault tolerance of future large-scale quantum processors derive in large part from the connectivity between the qubits. One approach to increase connectivity is to engineer qubit–qubit interactions at a distance. Alternatively, the connectivity can be increased by physically displacing the qubits. For semiconductor spin qubits, several studies have investigated spin coherent shuttling of individual electrons, but high-fidelity transport over extended distances remains to be demonstrated. Here we report shuttling of an electron inside an isotopically purified Si/SiGe heterostructure using electric gate potentials. In a first set of experiments, we form static quantum dots and study how spin coherence decays during bucket-brigade shuttling, where we repeatedly move a single electron between up to five dots. Next, for conveyor-mode shuttling, we create a travelling-wave potential, formed with either one or two sets of sine waves, to transport an electron in a moving quantum dot. This method shows a spin coherence an order of magnitude better than the bucket-brigade shuttling. It allows us to displace an electron over an effective distance of 10 μm in under 200 ns while preserving the spin state with a fidelity of 99.5% on average. These results will guide future efforts to realize large-scale semiconductor quantum processors, making use of electron shuttling both within and between qubit arrays.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007519632&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41565-025-01920-5
DO - 10.1038/s41565-025-01920-5
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105007519632
SN - 1748-3387
VL - 20
SP - 866
EP - 872
JO - Nature Nanotechnology
JF - Nature Nanotechnology
IS - 7
ER -