Selective Shuttling of Electrons on Helium Using a CMOS Control Platform

ORAL

Abstract

Electrons bound to the surface of liquid helium are an emerging quantum computing platform, offering the potential for highly mobile spin qubits that can be manipulated using CMOS-fabricated devices. Here, as a step toward realizing this technology, we demonstrate selective two-dimensional shuttling of electrons across a helium film condensed on the surface of a CMOS control chip. The electrons are moved in packets containing, on average, several tens down to single electrons. We perform CCD-style electron shuttling in any of 128 transport microchannels, each of which links electron 'storage zones' and 'detection zones' in the 2D plane. Shuttling sequences can be repeated at least 10^6 times with no detectable electron loss. The device serves as a prototype quantum information processing platform that is readily scalable to control large monolithically integrated arrays of single spins.

Publication: Selective Shuttling of Electrons on Helium Using a CMOS Control Platform (planned)

Presenters

  • Kyle Castoria

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware

Authors

  • Kyle Castoria

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Elena Okushi Glen

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Heenjun Byeon

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Niyaz Beysengulov

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Gerwin Koolstra

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Michael J Sammon

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Stephen Lyon

    • Princeton University
    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • Johannes Pollanen

    • Michigan State University
    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware
  • David G Rees

    • EeroQ Quantum Hardware