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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Extended spin relaxation times of optically addressed telecom defects in silicon carbide
arXiv
Authors: Jonghoon Ahn, Christina Wicker, Nolan Bitner, Michael T. Solomon, Benedikt Tissot, Guido Burkard, Alan M. Dibos, Jiefei Zhang, F. Joseph Heremans, David D. Awschalom
Year
2024
Paper ID
67281
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
149
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Optically interfaced solid-state defects are promising candidates for quantum communication technologies. The ideal defect system would feature bright telecom emission, long-lived spin states, and a scalable material platform, simultaneously. Here, we employ one such system, vanadium (V4+) in silicon carbide (SiC), to establish a potential telecom spin-photon interface within a mature semiconductor host. This demonstration of efficient optical spin polarization and readout facilitates all optical measurements of temperature-dependent spin relaxation times (T1). With this technique, we lower the temperature from about 2K to 100 mK to observe a remarkable four-orders-of-magnitude increase in spin T1 from all measured sites, with site-specific values ranging from 57 ms to above 27 s. Furthermore, we identify the underlying relaxation mechanisms, which involve a two-phonon Orbach process, indicating the opportunity for strain-tuning to enable qubit operation at higher temperatures. These results position V4+ in SiC as a prime candidate for scalable quantum nodes in future quantum networks.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Optically interfaced solid-state defects are promising candidates for quantum communication technologies.
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