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Dive into the research topics where C. B. Simmons is active.

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Featured researches published by C. B. Simmons.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Tunable Spin Loading and T-1 of a Silicon Spin Qubit Measured by Single-Shot Readout

C. B. Simmons; Jonathan Prance; B. J. Van Bael; Teck Seng Koh; Zhan Shi; D. E. Savage; Max G. Lagally; Robert Joynt; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

The remarkable properties of silicon have made it the central material for the fabrication of current microelectronic devices. Silicon’s fundamental properties also make it an attractive option for the development of devices for spintronics [1] and quantum information processing [2–5]. The ability to manipulate and measure spins of single electrons is crucial for these applications. Here we report the manipulation and measurement of a single spin in a quantum dot fabricated in a silicon/silicon-germanium heterostructure. We demonstrate that the rate of loading of electrons into the device can be tuned over an order of magnitude using a gate voltage, that the spin state of the loaded electron depends systematically on the loading voltage level, and that this tunability arises because electron spins can be loaded through excited orbital states of the quantum dot. The longitudinal spin relaxation time T1 is measured using single-shot pulsed techniques [6] and found to be ∼ 3 seconds at a field of 1.85 Tesla. The demonstration of single spin measurement as well as a long spin relaxation time and tunability of the loading are all favorable properties for spintronics and quantum information processing applications. Silicon is a material in which spin qubits are expected to have long coherence times, thanks to the predominance of a spin-zero nuclear isotope and relatively weak spin-orbit coupling. However, silicon quantum dots have yet to demonstrate the reproducibility and controllability achieved in gallium arsenide devices [7–10]. Here, we demonstrate the control and manipulation of spin states of single electrons in a silicon/silicon-germanium (Si/SiGe) quantum dot and report the first single-shot measurements of the longitudinal spin relaxation time T1 in such devices. We also show that the presence of a relatively low-lying spin-split orbital excited state in the dot can be exploited to increase the speed and tunability of the loading of spins into the dot. Our results demonstrate that Si/SiGe quantum dots can be fabricated that are sufficiently tunable to enable single-electron manipulation and measurement, and that long spin relaxation times are consistent with the orbital and/or valley excitation energies in these systems. The measurements we report were performed on a gate-defined quantum dot with the gate configuration shown in Fig. 1a, tuned to be in the single-dot regime. The dot is measured at low temperature and in a parallel magnetic field. As shown in Fig. 1b, an electron can be loaded into one of four energy eigenstates; we denote 2.0 1.0 0.0 B (T) -0.158 -0.152


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Fast Hybrid Silicon Double-Quantum-Dot Qubit

Zhan Shi; C. B. Simmons; Jonathan Prance; John King Gamble; Teck Seng Koh; Yun-Pil Shim; Xuedong Hu; D. E. Savage; Max G. Lagally; M. A. Eriksson; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith

We propose a quantum dot qubit architecture that has an attractive combination of speed and fabrication simplicity. It consists of a double quantum dot with one electron in one dot and two electrons in the other. The qubit itself is a set of two states with total spin quantum numbers S(2)=3/4 (S=1/2) and S(z)=-1/2, with the two different states being singlet and triplet in the doubly occupied dot. Gate operations can be implemented electrically and the qubit is highly tunable, enabling fast implementation of one- and two-qubit gates in a simpler geometry and with fewer operations than in other proposed quantum dot qubit architectures with fast operations. Moreover, the system has potentially long decoherence times. These are all extremely attractive properties for use in quantum information processing devices.


Nano Letters | 2009

Charge Sensing and Controllable Tunnel Coupling in a Si/SiGe Double Quantum Dot

C. B. Simmons; Madhu Thalakulam; B. M. Rosemeyer; B. J. Van Bael; E. K. Sackmann; D. E. Savage; M. G. Lagally; Robert Joynt; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

We report integrated charge sensing measurements on a Si/SiGe double quantum dot. The quantum dot is shown to be tunable from a single, large dot to a well-isolated double dot. Charge sensing measurements enable the extraction of the tunnel coupling t between the quantum dots as a function of the voltage on the top gates defining the device. Control of the voltage on a single such gate tunes the barrier separating the two dots. The measured tunnel coupling is an exponential function of the gate voltage. The ability to control t is an important step toward controlling spin qubits in silicon quantum dots.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Single-electron quantum dot in Si∕SiGe with integrated charge sensing

C. B. Simmons; Madhu Thalakulam; Nakul Shaji; Levente J. Klein; Hua Qin; Robert H. Blick; D. E. Savage; M. G. Lagally; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

Single-electron occupation is an essential component to the measurement and manipulation of spin in quantum dots, capabilities that are important for quantum information processing. Si∕SiGe is of interest for semiconductor spin qubits, but single-electron quantum dots have not yet been achieved in this system. We report the fabrication and measurement of a top-gated quantum dot occupied by a single electron in a Si∕SiGe heterostructure. Transport through the quantum dot is directly correlated with charge sensing from an integrated quantum point contact, and this charge sensing is used to confirm single-electron occupancy in the quantum dot.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Single-Shot Measurement of Triplet-Singlet Relaxation in a Si/SiGe Double Quantum Dot

Jonathan Prance; Zhan Shi; C. B. Simmons; D. E. Savage; M. G. Lagally; L. R. Schreiber; L. M. K. Vandersypen; Mark Friesen; Robert Joynt; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

We investigate the lifetime of two-electron spin states in a few-electron Si/SiGe double dot. At the transition between the (1,1) and (0,2) charge occupations, Pauli spin blockade provides a readout mechanism for the spin state. We use the statistics of repeated single-shot measurements to extract the lifetimes of multiple states simultaneously. When the magnetic field is zero, we find that all three triplet states have equal lifetimes, as expected, and this time is ~10 ms. When the field is nonzero, the T(0) lifetime is unchanged, whereas the T- lifetime increases monotonically with the field, reaching 3 sec at 1 T.


Nature Communications | 2014

Fast coherent manipulation of three-electron states in a double quantum dot

Zhan Shi; C. B. Simmons; Daniel Ward; Jonathan Prance; Xian Wu; Teck Seng Koh; John King Gamble; D. E. Savage; Max G. Lagally; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

An important goal in the manipulation of quantum systems is the achievement of many coherent oscillations within the characteristic dephasing time T2(*). Most manipulations of electron spins in quantum dots have focused on the construction and control of two-state quantum systems, or qubits, in which each quantum dot is occupied by a single electron. Here we perform quantum manipulations on a system with three electrons per double quantum dot. We demonstrate that tailored pulse sequences can be used to induce coherent rotations between three-electron quantum states. Certain pulse sequences yield coherent oscillations fast enough that more than 100 oscillations are visible within a T2(*) time. The minimum oscillation frequency we observe is faster than 5 GHz. The presence of the third electron enables very fast rotations to all possible states, in contrast to the case when only two electrons are used, in which some rotations are slow.


Physical Review B | 2013

Coherent quantum oscillations and echo measurements of a Si charge qubit

Zhan Shi; C. B. Simmons; Daniel Ward; Jonathan Prance; R. T. Mohr; Teck Seng Koh; John King Gamble; Xian Wu; D. E. Savage; M. G. Lagally; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

Fast quantum oscillations of a charge qubit in a double quantum dot fabricated in a Si/SiGe heterostructure are demonstrated and characterized experimentally. The measured inhomogeneous dephasing time T ∗ 2 ranges from 127 ps to ∼2.1 ns; it depends substantially on how the energy difference of the the two qubit states varies with external voltages, consistent with a decoherence process that is dominated by detuning noise (charge noise that changes the asymmetry of the qubit’s double-well potential). In the regime with the shortest T ∗ 2 , applying a charge-echo pulse sequence increases the measured inhomogeneous decoherence time from 127 ps to 760 ps, demonstrating that low-frequency noise processes are an important dephasing mechanism.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Tunable singlet-triplet splitting in a few-electron Si/SiGe quantum dot

Zhan Shi; C. B. Simmons; Jonathan Prance; John King Gamble; Mark Friesen; Don Savage; Max G. Lagally; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

We measure the excited-state spectrum of a Si/SiGe quantum dot as a function of in-plane magnetic field and identify the spin of the lowest three eigenstates in an effective two-electron regime. We extract the singlet-triplet splitting, an essential parameter for spin qubits, from the data. We find it to be tunable by lateral displacement of the dot, which is realized by changing two gate voltages on opposite sides of the device. We present calculations showing the data are consistent with a spectrum in which the first excited state of the dot is a valley-orbit state.


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Fast tunnel rates in Si/SiGe one-electron single and double quantum dots

Madhu Thalakulam; C. B. Simmons; B. M. Rosemeyer; Don Savage; M. G. Lagally; Mark Friesen; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson

We report the fabrication and measurement of one-electron single and double quantum dots with fast tunnel rates in a Si/SiGe heterostructure. Achieving fast tunnel rates in few-electron dots can be challenging, in part due to the large electron effective mass in Si. Using charge sensing, we identify signatures of tunnel rates in and out of the dot that are fast or slow compared to the measurement rate. Such signatures provide a means to calibrate the absolute electron number and verify single electron occupation. Pulsed gate voltage measurements are used to validate the approach.


Advanced Materials | 2012

Nanoscale distortions of Si quantum wells in Si/SiGe quantum-electronic heterostructures.

Paul G. Evans; D. E. Savage; Jonathan Prance; C. B. Simmons; Max G. Lagally; S. N. Coppersmith; M. A. Eriksson; T. U. Schülli

Si quantum wells on plastically relaxed SiGe substrates have nanometer variations in crystallographic parameters crucial to quantum-information devices. Synchrotron X-ray nanodiffraction shows that the lattice of the Si quantum well varies in orientation and thickness over lateral distances of 100 nm to 1 μm. The result is that the energy levels of the confined states are shifted by energies similar to the electron temperature.

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S. N. Coppersmith

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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D. E. Savage

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mark Friesen

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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M. A. Eriksson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Max G. Lagally

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Teck Seng Koh

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Zhan Shi

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Robert Joynt

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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B. J. Van Bael

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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