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Quantum Information Storage for over 180 s Using Donor Spins in a <sup>28</sup> Si “Semiconductor Vacuum”

302

Citations

32

References

2012

Year

TLDR

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.

Abstract

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.

References

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