Physical Review X (Feb 2023)

Fast High-Fidelity Single-Shot Readout of Spins in Silicon Using a Single-Electron Box

  • G. A. Oakes,
  • V. N. Ciriano-Tejel,
  • D. F. Wise,
  • M. A. Fogarty,
  • T. Lundberg,
  • C. Lainé,
  • S. Schaal,
  • F. Martins,
  • D. J. Ibberson,
  • L. Hutin,
  • B. Bertrand,
  • N. Stelmashenko,
  • J. W. A. Robinson,
  • L. Ibberson,
  • A. Hashim,
  • I. Siddiqi,
  • A. Lee,
  • M. Vinet,
  • C. G. Smith,
  • J. J. L. Morton,
  • M. F. Gonzalez-Zalba

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.13.011023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 011023

Abstract

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Three key metrics for readout systems in quantum processors are measurement speed, fidelity, and footprint. Fast high-fidelity readout enables midcircuit measurements, a necessary feature for many dynamic algorithms and quantum error correction, while a small footprint facilitates the design of scalable, highly connected architectures with the associated increase in computing performance. Here, we present two complementary demonstrations of fast high-fidelity single-shot readout of spins in silicon quantum dots using a compact, dispersive charge sensor: a radio-frequency single-electron box. The sensor, despite requiring fewer electrodes than conventional detectors, performs at the state of the art achieving spin readout fidelity of 99.2% in less than 6 μs fitted from a physical model. We demonstrate that low-loss high-impedance resonators, highly coupled to the sensing dot, in conjunction with Josephson parametric amplification are instrumental in achieving optimal performance. We quantify the benefit of Pauli spin blockade over spin-dependent tunneling to a reservoir, as the spin-to-charge conversion mechanism in these readout schemes. Our results place dispersive charge sensing at the forefront of readout methodologies for scalable semiconductor spin-based quantum processors.