Physical Review X (Mar 2022)

Entanglement of Spin-Pair Qubits with Intrinsic Dephasing Times Exceeding a Minute

  • H. P. Bartling,
  • M. H. Abobeih,
  • B. Pingault,
  • M. J. Degen,
  • S. J. H. Loenen,
  • C. E. Bradley,
  • J. Randall,
  • M. Markham,
  • D. J. Twitchen,
  • T. H. Taminiau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.12.011048
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 011048

Abstract

Read online Read online

Understanding and protecting the coherence of individual quantum systems is a central challenge in quantum science and technology. Over the past decades, a rich variety of methods to extend coherence have been developed. A complementary approach is to look for naturally occurring systems that are inherently protected against decoherence. Here, we show that pairs of identical nuclear spins in solids form intrinsically long-lived qubits. We study three carbon-13 pairs in diamond and realize high-fidelity measurements of their quantum states using a single nitrogen-vacancy center in their vicinity. We then reveal that the spin pairs are robust to external perturbations due to a combination of three phenomena: a decoherence-free subspace, a clock transition, and a variant on motional narrowing. The resulting inhomogeneous dephasing time is T_{2}^{*}=1.9(3) min, the longest reported for individually controlled qubits. Finally, we develop complete control and realize an entangled state between two spin pairs through projective parity measurements. These long-lived qubits are abundantly present in diamond and other solids and provide new opportunities for ancilla-enhanced quantum sensing and for robust memory qubits for quantum networks.