Litcius/Paper detail

Sensitive radio-frequency read-out of quantum dots using an ultra-low-noise SQUID amplifier

Felix J. Schupp, Florian Vigneau, Yutian Wen, Aquila Mavalankar, Jonathan Griffiths, G. A. C. Jones, I. Farrer, D. A. Ritchie, Charles G. Smith, Leon C. Camenzind, Liuqi Yu, Dominik M. Zumbühl, G. Andrew D. Briggs, Natalia Ares, E. A. Laird

2020Lancaster EPrints (Lancaster University)19 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fault-tolerant spin-based quantum computers will require fast and accurate qubit readout. This can be achieved using radio-frequency reflectometry given sufficient sensitivity to the change in quantum capacitance associated with the qubit states. Here, we demonstrate a 23-fold improvement in capacitance sensitivity by supplementing a cryogenic semiconductor amplifier with a SQUID preamplifier. The SQUID amplifier operates at a frequency near 200 MHz and achieves a noise temperature below 600 mK when integrated into a reflectometry circuit, which is within a factor 120 of the quantum limit. It enables a record sensitivity to capacitance of 0.07 aF/√Hz. The setup is used to acquire charge stability diagrams of a gate-defined double quantum dot in a short time with a signal-to-noise ration of about 38 in 1 µs of integration time.

Topics & Concepts

Quantum limitPhysicsAmplifierSquidCapacitanceQuantum capacitanceOptoelectronicsNoise (video)PreamplifierQubitSensitivity (control systems)Noise temperatureQuantum sensorQuantum computerQuantumElectronic engineeringOpticsPhase noiseQuantum simulatorQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceElectrodeCMOSEngineeringImage (mathematics)Artificial intelligenceBiologyEcologyQuantum and electron transport phenomenaAdvancements in Semiconductor Devices and Circuit DesignSemiconductor materials and devices