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A High-Sensitivity Charge Sensor for Silicon Qubits above 1 K.

J. Y. Huang, W. H. Lim, R. Leon, C. Yang, F. Hudson, C. Escott, A. Saraiva, A. Dzurak, A. Laucht·March 11, 2021·DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c01003
MedicinePhysics

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Abstract

Recent studies of silicon spin qubits at temperatures above 1 K are encouraging demonstrations that the cooling requirements for solid-state quantum computing can be considerably relaxed. However, qubit readout mechanisms that rely on charge sensing with a single-island single-electron transistor (SISET) quickly lose sensitivity due to thermal broadening of the electron distribution in the reservoirs. Here we exploit the tunneling between two quantized states in a double-island single-electron transistor (SET) to demonstrate a charge sensor with an improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio by an order of magnitude compared to a standard SISET, and a single-shot charge readout fidelity above 99% up to 8 K at a bandwidth greater than 100 kHz. These improvements are consistent with our theoretical modeling of the temperature-dependent current transport for both types of SETs. With minor additional hardware overhead, these sensors can be integrated into existing qubit architectures for a high-fidelity charge readout at few-kelvin temperatures.

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