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Main Authors: Denisov, Artem O., Reckova, Veronika, Cances, Solenn, Ruckriegel, Max J., Masseroni, Michele, Adam, Christoph, Tong, Chuyao, Gerber, Jonas D., Huang, Wei Wister, Watanabe, Kenji, Taniguchi, Takashi, Ihn, Thomas, Ensslin, Klaus, Duprez, Hadrien
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.08143
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author Denisov, Artem O.
Reckova, Veronika
Cances, Solenn
Ruckriegel, Max J.
Masseroni, Michele
Adam, Christoph
Tong, Chuyao
Gerber, Jonas D.
Huang, Wei Wister
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Ihn, Thomas
Ensslin, Klaus
Duprez, Hadrien
author_facet Denisov, Artem O.
Reckova, Veronika
Cances, Solenn
Ruckriegel, Max J.
Masseroni, Michele
Adam, Christoph
Tong, Chuyao
Gerber, Jonas D.
Huang, Wei Wister
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Ihn, Thomas
Ensslin, Klaus
Duprez, Hadrien
contents The intrinsic valley degree of freedom makes bilayer graphene (BLG) a unique platform for semiconductor qubits. The single-carrier quantum dot (QD) ground state exhibits a two-fold degeneracy, where the two states that constitute a Kramers pair, have opposite spin and valley quantum numbers. Because of the valley-dependent Berry curvature, an out-of-plane magnetic field breaks the time-reversal symmetry of this ground state and a qubit can be encoded in the spin-valley subspace. The Kramers states are protected against known spin- and valley-mixing mechanisms because mixing requires a simultaneous change of both quantum numbers. Here, we fabricate a tunable QD device in Bernal BLG and measure a spin-valley relaxation time for the Kramers states of ${38~\mathrm{s}}$, which is two orders of magnitude longer than the ${0.4~\mathrm{s}}$ measured for purely spin-blocked states. We also show that the intrinsic Kane-Mele spin-orbit splitting enables a Kramers doublet single-shot readout even at zero magnetic field with a fidelity above ${99\%}$. If these long-lived Kramers states also possess long coherence times and can be effectively manipulated, electrostatically defined QDs in BLG may serve as long-lived semiconductor qubits, extending beyond the spin qubit paradigm.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_08143
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Spin-Valley Protected Kramers Pair in Bilayer Graphene
Denisov, Artem O.
Reckova, Veronika
Cances, Solenn
Ruckriegel, Max J.
Masseroni, Michele
Adam, Christoph
Tong, Chuyao
Gerber, Jonas D.
Huang, Wei Wister
Watanabe, Kenji
Taniguchi, Takashi
Ihn, Thomas
Ensslin, Klaus
Duprez, Hadrien
Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Quantum Physics
The intrinsic valley degree of freedom makes bilayer graphene (BLG) a unique platform for semiconductor qubits. The single-carrier quantum dot (QD) ground state exhibits a two-fold degeneracy, where the two states that constitute a Kramers pair, have opposite spin and valley quantum numbers. Because of the valley-dependent Berry curvature, an out-of-plane magnetic field breaks the time-reversal symmetry of this ground state and a qubit can be encoded in the spin-valley subspace. The Kramers states are protected against known spin- and valley-mixing mechanisms because mixing requires a simultaneous change of both quantum numbers. Here, we fabricate a tunable QD device in Bernal BLG and measure a spin-valley relaxation time for the Kramers states of ${38~\mathrm{s}}$, which is two orders of magnitude longer than the ${0.4~\mathrm{s}}$ measured for purely spin-blocked states. We also show that the intrinsic Kane-Mele spin-orbit splitting enables a Kramers doublet single-shot readout even at zero magnetic field with a fidelity above ${99\%}$. If these long-lived Kramers states also possess long coherence times and can be effectively manipulated, electrostatically defined QDs in BLG may serve as long-lived semiconductor qubits, extending beyond the spin qubit paradigm.
title Spin-Valley Protected Kramers Pair in Bilayer Graphene
topic Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics
Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.08143