Abstract

AbstractThe performance of dual‐gate GaAs‐nanowire field‐effect‐transistor (FET) is investigated as a charge‐qubit device operating at room temperature. In compatibility with the state‐of‐the‐art classical bit technology, it is shown that the single gate of a nanowire FET can be replaced by two localized gates to achieve such charge‐qubit operation. On application of relevant biases to the localized gates, two voltage tunable quantum dots are created within the nanowire channel with electrostatically controlled single‐state‐occupancy and interdot coupling leading to charge‐qubit operation at room temperature. The associated electron transport is theoretically modeled on the basis of nonequilibrium Green's function formalism. The “initialization” and “manipulation” for qubit operation are performed by applying suitable gate voltages, whereas the “measurement” is executed by applying a small drain bias to obtain a pulse current of ≈pA order. A ≈25 MHz frequency of coherent oscillation is observed for the qubit and a characteristic decay time of ≈ 70 ns is achieved. The results suggest that such dual gate nanowire FET is a promising architecture for charge‐qubit operation at room temperature.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call