Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session H35: Semiconducting Qubits: Characterization of Electron and Hole Spin Qubits
2:30 PM–5:06 PM,
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
BCEC
Room: 205B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DQI
Chair: Andrew Pan, HRL Laboratories, LLC
Abstract: H35.00011 : EDSR of a single heavy hole in a lateral GaAs/AlGaAs quantum dot qubit
4:30 PM–4:42 PM
Presenter:
Sergei Studenikin
(National Research Council of Canada)
Authors:
Sergei Studenikin
(National Research Council of Canada)
Motoi Takahashi
(National Research Council of Canada)
Guy Austing
(National Research Council of Canada)
Alex Bogan
(National Research Council of Canada)
Louis Gaudreau
(National Research Council of Canada)
Marek J Korkusinski
(National Research Council of Canada)
Piotr Zawadzki
(National Research Council of Canada)
Andrew Sachrajda
(National Research Council of Canada)
Lisa A Tracy
(Sandia National Laboratories)
John Reno
(Sandia National Laboratories)
Terry Hargett
(Sandia National Laboratories)
Here we report single hole electric dipole spin resonance (EDSR) measurements over the 20-50 GHz range taking advantage of the strong spin-orbit coupling. The experiment was performed in a GaAs double quantum dot device described in [1] tuned in such way that only one of the dots contained a single heavy hole with the Fermi level of the adjacent lead positioned in between Zeeman split spin states. In this situation one hole is initialized in the lowest spin level and the current is blocked. A small microwave voltage is applied to a plunger gate to mediate EDSR rotating the hole spin from the lower to the upper spin level allowing the hole to tunnel to the lead. The spin resonance is detected as an increase in current when the resonant condition is fulfilled. The second dot is used as an auxiliary tool to tune the g-factor via a strong spin-dependent tunnel coupling[1]. We show that g-factor can be tuned in the range of 30% by a small change of the voltage applied to the auxiliary dot plunger gate.
[1] A. Bogan et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 207701 (2018).
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