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Open Quantum Systems Decoherence
Decoherence-protected entangling gates in a silicon carbide quantum node
arXiv
Authors: Shuo Ren, Rui-Jian Liang, Zhen-Xuan He, Ji-Yang Zhou, Wu-Xi Lin, Zhi-He Hao, Bing Chen, Tao Tu, Jin-Shi Xu, Chuan-Feng Li, Guang-Can Guo
Year
2026
Paper ID
2928
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
130
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Solid-state color centers are promising candidates for nodes in quantum network architectures. However, realizing scalable and fully functional quantum nodes, comprising both processor and memory qubits with high-fidelity universal gate operations, remains a central challenge in this field. Here, we demonstrate a fully functional quantum node in silicon carbide, where electron spins act as quantum processors and nuclear spins serve as quantum memory. Specifically, we design a pulse sequence that combines dynamical decoupling with hyperfine interactions to realize decoherence-protected universal gate operations between the processor and memory qubits. Leveraging this gate, we deterministically prepare entangled states within the quantum node, achieving a fidelity of 90%, which exceeds the fault-tolerance threshold of certain quantum network architectures. These results open a pathway toward scalable and fully functional quantum nodes based on silicon carbide.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Open Quantum Systems & Decoherence research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2026 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Solid-state color centers are promising candidates for nodes in quantum network architectures.
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