Abstract

In this article, I present a theoretical study of the electron and nuclear spin coherence times of shallow donor spin qubits in zinc oxide (ZnO) at low temperature. The influence of different spin-phonon processes as well as different spin-spin processes on the spin coherence time of shallow donors in ZnO is considered, both in the case of an electron spin qubit and in the case of a nuclear spin qubit encoded on a shallow donor. It is estimated that the electron spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor in natural quasi-intrinsic ZnO is on the order of hundreds of microseconds, limited by the nuclear spectral diffusion process. The electron spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor can be extended to few milliseconds in isotopically and chemically purified quasi-intrinsic ZnO. In this optimal case, the electron spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor is only limited by a spin-lattice decoherence process. It is also estimated that the nuclear spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor in natural quasi-intrinsic ZnO is on the order of hundreds of milliseconds, limited by the nuclear spectral diffusion process. The nuclear spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor can be extended to few seconds in isotopically and chemically purified quasi-intrinsic ZnO. In this optimal case, the nuclear spin coherence time of an isolated indium shallow donor is only limited by the cross relaxation decoherence process. This study thus shows the great potential of electron and nuclear spin qubits encoded on shallow donors in isotopically and chemically purified quasi-intrinsic ZnO for the implementation of quantum processor and/or quantum memories.

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