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Featured researches published by Kenta Takeda.


Science Advances | 2016

A fault-tolerant addressable spin qubit in a natural silicon quantum dot

Kenta Takeda; J. Kamioka; Tomohiro Otsuka; Jun Yoneda; Takashi Nakajima; Matthieu R. Delbecq; S. Amaha; Giles Allison; Tetsuo Kodera; Shunri Oda; S. Tarucha

This is the first experimental demonstration of a fault-tolerant spin qubit in industry-compatible isotopically natural silicon. Fault-tolerant quantum computing requires high-fidelity qubits. This has been achieved in various solid-state systems, including isotopically purified silicon, but is yet to be accomplished in industry-standard natural (unpurified) silicon, mainly as a result of the dephasing caused by residual nuclear spins. This high fidelity can be achieved by speeding up the qubit operation and/or prolonging the dephasing time, that is, increasing the Rabi oscillation quality factor Q (the Rabi oscillation decay time divided by the π rotation time). In isotopically purified silicon quantum dots, only the second approach has been used, leaving the qubit operation slow. We apply the first approach to demonstrate an addressable fault-tolerant qubit using a natural silicon double quantum dot with a micromagnet that is optimally designed for fast spin control. This optimized design allows access to Rabi frequencies up to 35 MHz, which is two orders of magnitude greater than that achieved in previous studies. We find the optimum Q = 140 in such high-frequency range at a Rabi frequency of 10 MHz. This leads to a qubit fidelity of 99.6% measured via randomized benchmarking, which is the highest reported for natural silicon qubits and comparable to that obtained in isotopically purified silicon quantum dot–based qubits. This result can inspire contributions to quantum computing from industrial communities.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2018

A quantum-dot spin qubit with coherence limited by charge noise and fidelity higher than 99.9%

Jun Yoneda; Kenta Takeda; Tomohiro Otsuka; Takashi Nakajima; Matthieu R. Delbecq; Giles Allison; Takumu Honda; Tetsuo Kodera; Shunri Oda; Yusuke Hoshi; Noritaka Usami; Kohei M. Itoh; S. Tarucha

1 RIKEN Center for Emergent Matter Science, RIKEN, 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan 2 Department of Applied Physics, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan 3 JST, PRESTO, 4-1-8 Honcho, Kawaguchi, Saitama, 332-0012, Japan 4 Department of Physical Electronics, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8552, Japan 5 Institute of Industrial Science, University of Tokyo, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-8505, Japan 6 Graduate School of Engineering, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8603, Japan 7 Department of Applied Physics and Physico-Informatics, Keio University, Hiyoshi, Yokohama 223-8522,


Applied Physics Letters | 2013

Characterization and suppression of low-frequency noise in Si/SiGe quantum point contacts and quantum dots

Kenta Takeda; Toshiaki Obata; Y. Fukuoka; W. M. Akhtar; J. Kamioka; Tetsuo Kodera; Shunri Oda; S. Tarucha

We report on the effects of a global top gate on low-frequency noise in Schottky gate-defined quantum point contacts (QPCs) and quantum dots (QDs) in a modulation-doped Si/SiGe heterostructure. For a relatively large top gate voltage, the QPC current shows frequent switching with 1/f2 Lorentzian type charge noise. As the top gate voltage is decreased, the QPC pinch-off voltage becomes less negative, and the 1/f2 noise becomes rapidly suppressed in a homogeneous background 1/f noise. We apply this top-gating technique to double QDs to stabilize the charge state for the electron number down to zero.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Quantum Dephasing in a Gated GaAs Triple Quantum Dot due to Nonergodic Noise.

Matthieu R. Delbecq; Takashi Nakajima; Peter Stano; Tomohiro Otsuka; S. Amaha; Jun Yoneda; Kenta Takeda; Giles Allison; A. Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; S. Tarucha

We extract the phase coherence of a qubit defined by singlet and triplet electronic states in a gated GaAs triple quantum dot, measuring on time scales much shorter than the decorrelation time of the environmental noise. In this nonergodic regime, we observe that the coherence is boosted and several dephasing times emerge, depending on how the phase stability is extracted. We elucidate their mutual relations, and demonstrate that they reflect the noise short-time dynamics.


Applied Physics Letters | 2016

Coherent electron-spin-resonance manipulation of three individual spins in a triple quantum dot

Akito Noiri; Jun Yoneda; Takashi Nakajima; Tomohiro Otsuka; Matthiew R. Delbecq; Kenta Takeda; S. Amaha; Giles Allison; Arne Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; S. Tarucha

Quantum dot arrays provide a promising platform for quantum information processing. For universal quantum simulation and computation, one central issue is to demonstrate the exhaustive controllability of quantum states. Here, we report the addressable manipulation of three single electron spins in a triple quantum dot using a technique combining electron-spin-resonance and a micro-magnet. The micro-magnet makes the local Zeeman field difference between neighboring spins much larger than the nuclear field fluctuation, which ensures the addressable driving of electron-spin-resonance by shifting the resonance condition for each spin. We observe distinct coherent Rabi oscillations for three spins in a semiconductor triple quantum dot with up to 25 MHz spin rotation frequencies. This individual manipulation over three spins enables us to arbitrarily change the magnetic spin quantum number of the three spin system, and thus to operate a triple-dot device as a three-qubit system in combination with the existing technique of exchange operations among three spins.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Detection and control of charge states in a quintuple quantum dot

Takumi Ito; Tomohiro Otsuka; S. Amaha; Matthieu R. Delbecq; Takashi Nakajima; Jun Yoneda; Kenta Takeda; Giles Allison; Akito Noiri; Kento Kawasaki; S. Tarucha

A semiconductor quintuple quantum dot with two charge sensors and an additional contact to the center dot from an electron reservoir is fabricated to demonstrate the concept of scalable architecture. This design enables formation of the five dots as confirmed by measurements of the charge states of the three nearest dots to the respective charge sensor. The gate performance of the measured stability diagram is well reproduced by a capacitance model. These results provide an important step towards realizing controllable large scale multiple quantum dot systems.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Robust Single-Shot Spin Measurement with 99.5% Fidelity in a Quantum Dot Array

Takashi Nakajima; Matthieu R. Delbecq; Tomohiro Otsuka; Peter Stano; S. Amaha; Jun Yoneda; Akito Noiri; Kento Kawasaki; Kenta Takeda; Giles Allison; Arne Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; Daniel Loss; Seigo Tarucha

We demonstrate a new method for projective single-shot measurement of two electron spin states (singlet versus triplet) in an array of gate-defined lateral quantum dots in GaAs. The measurement has very high fidelity and is robust with respect to electric and magnetic fluctuations in the environment. It exploits a long-lived metastable charge state, which increases both the contrast and the duration of the charge signal distinguishing the two measurement outcomes. This method allows us to evaluate the charge measurement error and the spin-to-charge conversion error separately. We specify conditions under which this method can be used, and project its general applicability to scalable quantum dot arrays in GaAs or silicon.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Single-electron Spin Resonance in a Quadruple Quantum Dot

Tomohiro Otsuka; Takashi Nakajima; Matthieu R. Delbecq; S. Amaha; Jun Yoneda; Kenta Takeda; Giles Allison; Takumi Ito; Retsu Sugawara; Akito Noiri; Arne Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; S. Tarucha

Electron spins in semiconductor quantum dots are good candidates of quantum bits for quantum information processing. Basic operations of the qubit have been realized in recent years: initialization, manipulation of single spins, two qubit entanglement operations, and readout. Now it becomes crucial to demonstrate scalability of this architecture by conducting spin operations on a scaled up system. Here, we demonstrate single-electron spin resonance in a quadruple quantum dot. A few-electron quadruple quantum dot is formed within a magnetic field gradient created by a micro-magnet. We oscillate the wave functions of the electrons in the quantum dots by applying microwave voltages and this induces electron spin resonance. The resonance energies of the four quantum dots are slightly different because of the stray field created by the micro-magnet and therefore frequency-resolved addressable control of each electron spin resonance is possible.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2014

Charge-noise-free Lateral Quantum Dot Devices with Undoped Si/SiGe Wafer

Toshiaki Obata; Kenta Takeda; J. Kamioka; Tetsuo Kodera; Kentarou Sawano; Shunri Oda; Yasuhiro Shiraki; S. Tarucha; Honcho Kawaguchi

We develop quantum dots in a single layered MOS structure using an undoped Si/SiGe wafer. By applying a positive bias on the surface gates, electrons are accumulated in the Si channel. Clear Coulomb diamond and double dot charge stability diagrams are measured. The temporal fluctuation of the current is traced, to which we apply the Fourier transform analysis. The power spectrum of the noise signal is inversely proportional to the frequency, and is different from the inversely quadratic behavior known for quantum dots made in doped wafers. Our results indicate that the source of charge noise for the doped wafers is related to the 2DEG dopant.


Nature Communications | 2018

Coherent transfer of electron spin correlations assisted by dephasing noise

Takashi Nakajima; Matthieu R. Delbecq; Tomohiro Otsuka; S. Amaha; Jun Yoneda; Akito Noiri; Kenta Takeda; Giles Allison; Arne Ludwig; Andreas D. Wieck; Xuedong Hu; Franco Nori; S. Tarucha

Quantum coherence of superposed states, especially of entangled states, is indispensable for many quantum technologies. However, it is vulnerable to environmental noises, posing a fundamental challenge in solid-state systems including spin qubits. Here we show a scheme of entanglement engineering where pure dephasing assists the generation of quantum entanglement at distant sites in a chain of electron spins confined in semiconductor quantum dots. One party of an entangled spin pair, prepared at a single site, is transferred to the next site and then adiabatically swapped with a third spin using a transition across a multi-level avoided crossing. This process is accelerated by the noise-induced dephasing through a variant of the quantum Zeno effect, without sacrificing the coherence of the entangled state. Our finding brings insight into the spin dynamics in open quantum systems coupled to noisy environments, opening an avenue to quantum state manipulation utilizing decoherence effects.Methods for coherently transferring quantum states are needed in order to develop larger scale quantum devices. Here the authors implement an adiabatic transfer protocol in a triple quantum dot and show that dephasing noise can accelerate the process while maintaining the coherence of the transferred state.

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Arne Ludwig

Ruhr University Bochum

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Shunri Oda

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Tetsuo Kodera

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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