Quick Navigation

Topics

Trapped Ion Quantum Computing Superconducting Qubits

Roadmap: 2D Materials for Quantum Technologies

arXiv
Authors: Qimin Yan, Tongcang Li, Xingyu Gao, Sumukh Vaidya, Saakshi Dikshit, Yue Luo, Stefan Strauf, Reda Moukaouine, Anton Pershin, Adam Gali, Zhenyao Fang, Harvey Stanfield, Ivan J. Vera-Marun, Michael Newburger, Simranjeet Singh, Tiancong Zhu, Mauro Brotons-Gisbert, Klaus D. Jöns, Brian D. Gerardot, Brian S. Y. Kim, John R. Schaibley, Kyle L. Seyler, Jesse Balgley, James Hone, Kin Chung Fong, Lin Wang, Guido Burkard, Yihang Zeng, Tobias Heindel, Serkan Ateş, Tobias Vogl, Igor Aharonovich

Year

2025

Paper ID

6028

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

188

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Two-dimensional (2D) materials have emerged as a versatile and powerful platform for quantum technologies, offering atomic-scale control, strong quantum confinement, and seamless integration into heterogeneous device architectures. Their reduced dimensionality enables unique quantum phenomena, including optically addressable spin defects, tunable single-photon emitters, low-dimensional magnetism, gate-controlled superconductivity, and correlated states in Moiré superlattices. This Roadmap provides a comprehensive overview of recent progress and future directions in exploiting 2D materials for quantum sensing, computation, communication, and simulation. We survey advances spanning spin defects and quantum sensing, quantum emitters and nonlinear photonics, computational theory and data-driven discovery of quantum defects, spintronic and magnonic devices, cavity-engineered quantum materials, superconducting and hybrid quantum circuits, quantum dots, Moiré quantum simulators, and quantum communication platforms. Across these themes, we identify common challenges in defect control, coherence preservation, interfacial engineering, and scalable integration, alongside emerging opportunities driven by machine-learning-assisted design and integrated experiment-theory feedback loops. By connecting microscopic quantum states to mesoscopic excitations and macroscopic device architectures, this Roadmap outlines a materials-centric framework for integrating coherent quantum functionalities and positions 2D materials as foundational building blocks for next-generation quantum technologies.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Two-dimensional (2D) materials have emerged as a versatile and powerful platform for quantum technologies, offering atomic-scale control, strong quantum confinement, and...

Paper Tools

Become a member to use research tools

Sign in to open papers, visit source links, share, cite, compare, copy DOI links, request category corrections, and build your reading list.

Show Paper arXiv Publisher Share Cite This Paper Copy URL Compare Copy DOI Add to Reading List Category Correction Request

References & Citation Signals

Local Citation Graph (Related-Paper Links)

Current Paper #6028 #69595 Tantalum as a base material for... #69534 Readout-Induced Leakage in Supe... #69599 Tensor network compression usin... #69590 Quantum Simulation of Spin-Depe...

External citation index: OpenAlex citation signal

Community Reactions

Quick sentiment from readers on this paper.

Score: 0
Likes: 0 Dislikes: 0

Sign in to react to this paper.

Discussion & Reviews (Moderated)

Average Rating: 0.0 / 5 (0 ratings)

No written reviews yet.