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Coherent electron transport by adiabatic passage in an imperfect donor chain

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 12:05 authored by R Rahman, Richard Muller, J.E Levy, M.S Carroll, Gerhard Klimeck, Andrew GreentreeAndrew Greentree, L.C.L Hollenberg
Coherent tunneling adiabatic passage (CTAP) has been proposed as a long-range physical quantum bits (qubit) transport mechanism in solid-state quantum computing architectures. Although the mechanism can be implemented in either a chain of quantum dots or donors, a one-dimensional chain of donors in Si is of particular interest due to the natural confining potential of donors that can, in principle, help reduce the gate densities in solid-state quantum computing architectures. Using detailed atomistic modeling, we investigate CTAP in a more realistic triple donor system in the presence of inevitable fabrication imperfections. In particular, we investigate how an adiabatic pathway for CTAP is affected by donor misplacements and propose schemes to correct for such errors. We also investigate the sensitivity of the adiabatic path to gate voltage fluctuations. The tight-binding based atomistic treatment of straggle used here may benefit understanding of other donor nanostructures, such as donor-based charge and spin qubits. Finally, we derive an effective 3×3 model of CTAP that accurately resembles the voltage tuned lowest energy states of the multimillion atom tight-binding simulations and provides a translation between intensive atomistic Hamiltonians and simplified effective Hamiltonians while retaining the relevant atomic-scale information. This method can help characterize multidonor experimental structures quickly and accurately even in the presence of imperfections, overcoming some of the numeric intractabilities of finding optimal eigenstates for nonideal donor placements

History

Journal

Physical Review B (Condensed Matter and Materials Physics)

Volume

82

Number

155315

Issue

15

Start page

1

End page

9

Total pages

9

Publisher

American Physical Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2010 The American Physical Society

Former Identifier

2006032356

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-05-25

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