Abstract

We investigate how pulse-sequences and operation times of elementary quantum gates can be optimized for silicon-based donor electron spin quantum computer architecture, complementary to the original Kane's nuclear spin proposal. This gate-sequence-optimal or time-optimal quantum gate control in a quantum circuit is in addition to the more conventional concept of optimality in terms of the number of elementary gates needed in a quantum transformation. The optimal control method we use is the so-called gradient ascent pulse engineering (GRAPE) scheme. We focus on the high fidelity controlled-NOT (CNOT) gate and explicitly find the digitized control sequences by optimizing the effective, reduced donor electron spin Hamiltonian, with external controls over the hyperfine A and exchange J interactions. We first try different piecewise constant control steps and numerically calculate the fidelity (error) against the time needed to implement a CNOT gate with stopping criteria of error in the optimizer set to 〖10〗^(-9) in order to economize the simulation time. Here, the error is defined as 1-F, where F is fidelity. The error is less than 〖10〗^(-8) for times longer than 100ns, and it is found that 30 piecewise constant control steps for the CNOT gate operation will be sufficient to meet the required fidelity (error), and the performance would not be improved further with more steps. With operation time t=100ns and stopping criteria of error set to 〖10〗^(-16), we can find that the near time-optimal, high-fidelity CNOT gate control sequence has an error of 〖1.11×10〗^(-16). We then simulate the control sequences of the CNOT gate, obtained from reduced Hamiltonian simulations, with the full spin Hamiltonian. We find the error of about 〖10〗^(-6) which is below the error threshold required for fault-tolerant (〖10〗^(-4)) quantum computation. The CNOT gate operation time of 100ns is 3 times faster than the globally controlled electron spin scheme of 297ns. One of the great advantages of this near optimal-time high fidelity CNOT gate is that the exchange interaction is not required to be strong (the maximum value is J/h=20MHz compared to the typical value of 10.2GHz. This relaxes significantly the stringent distance constraint of two neighboring donor atoms of about 10nm as reported in the original Kane's proposal to be about 30nm which is within the reach of the current fabrication technology.

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