Publication | Closed Access
Quantum Information Storage for over 180 s Using Donor Spins in a <sup>28</sup> Si “Semiconductor Vacuum”
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2012
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Quantum memory must be robust and long‑lived to support quantum communication and computation. Nuclear spins of 31P in isotopically pure 28Si exhibit coherence times up to 192 s at ~1.
Extending Quantum Memory Practical applications in quantum communication and quantum computation require the building blocks—quantum bits and quantum memory—to be sufficiently robust and long-lived to allow for manipulation and storage (see the Perspective by Boehme and McCarney ). Steger et al. (p. 1280 ) demonstrate that the nuclear spins of 31 P impurities in an almost isotopically pure sample of 28 Si can have a coherence time of as long as 192 seconds at a temperature of ∼1.7 K. In diamond at room temperature, Maurer et al. (p. 1283 ) show that a spin-based qubit system comprised of an isotopic impurity ( 13 C) in the vicinity of a color defect (a nitrogen-vacancy center) could be manipulated to have a coherence time exceeding one second. Such lifetimes promise to make spin-based architectures feasible building blocks for quantum information science.
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