New Journal of Physics (Jan 2023)

Gate reflectometry in dense quantum dot arrays

  • Fabio Ansaloni,
  • Heorhii Bohuslavskyi,
  • Federico Fedele,
  • Torbjørn Rasmussen,
  • Bertram Brovang,
  • Fabrizio Berritta,
  • Amber Heskes,
  • Jing Li,
  • Louis Hutin,
  • Benjamin Venitucci,
  • Benoit Bertrand,
  • Maud Vinet,
  • Yann-Michel Niquet,
  • Anasua Chatterjee,
  • Ferdinand Kuemmeth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/acc126
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
p. 033023

Abstract

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Silicon quantum devices are maturing from academic single- and two-qubit devices to industrially-fabricated dense quantum-dot (QD) arrays, increasing operational complexity and the need for better pulsed-gate and readout techniques. We perform gate-voltage pulsing and gate-based reflectometry measurements on a dense 2 × 2 array of silicon QDs fabricated in a 300 mm-wafer foundry. Utilizing the strong capacitive couplings within the array, it is sufficient to monitor only one gate electrode via high-frequency reflectometry to establish single-electron occupation in each of the four dots and to detect single-electron movements with high bandwidth. A global top-gate electrode adjusts the overall tunneling times, while linear combinations of side-gate voltages yield detailed charge stability diagrams. To test for spin physics and Pauli spin blockade at finite magnetic fields, we implement symmetric gate-voltage pulses that directly reveal bidirectional interdot charge relaxation as a function of the detuning between two dots. Charge sensing within the array can be established without the involvement of adjacent electron reservoirs, important for scaling such split-gate devices towards longer 2 × N arrays. Our techniques may find use in the scaling of few-dot spin-qubit devices to large-scale quantum processors.

Keywords