[The title
was written by my editor.]
Australian scientists recently report on the first successful attempt to
hold data on silicon quantum chip at over 99 percent accuracy.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
The world
of computing has held guarded optimism about one day having quantum computing
capability. Recently, two teams of Australian scientists propelled the dream a
great leap forward by developing the first silicon-based quantum qubits, or
bits, the basic information-unit in quantum computing. The accomplishments are
described in two recent publications in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
“We have
demonstrated that with silicon qubit we can have the accuracy needed to build a
real quantum computer,” said Andrew Dzurak of the University of New South
Wales, who is co-author on both papers. “That’s the first time this has been
done in silicon.”
Previous
work with phosphorous atoms as qubits achieved 50 percent accuracy when used in
silicon. One of the new methods built upon these
findings but with silicon atom qubits in silicon.
“In
natural silicon each atom also has its own spin which affects the phosphorous
atom, which is why the accuracy was only 50 per cent,” said Dzurak. “We solved
the problem by removing all the silicon 29 isotopes that have magnetic spin
leaving only silicon 28, which has no magnetic spin to influence the
phosphorous, giving us an accuracy of 99.99 per cent.”
The second method
involved turning a silicon transistor into an “artificial atom” qubit. As such,
the accuracy of the data storage reached 99.6 percent. Transistors produce
binary code, zeros and ones, by flowing electrons through an electronic gate
that can be turned on or off.
“What
we’ve done is make a silicon transistor with just one electron trapped in that
transistor,” explained Dzurak. “This lets us use exactly the same sort of
transistor that we use in computer chips and operate it as a qubit, opening the
potential to mass-produce this technology using the same sort of equipment used
for chip manufacturing.”
In
addition, with the silicon chips, the two teams of scientists also improved coherence
time, or the time over which a quantum system retains data.
“In
solid-state systems these times are typically measured in nano or micro seconds
before the information gets lost,” said Dzurak. “We are getting a 30-second
coherence time, which on the time-scale of doing calculations is an eternity.”
Dzurak
added that silicon is preferred in the industry because of its long coherence
times while retaining accuracy.
“We can go
better, these are only our first experiments,” says Dzurak.
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