Universal quantum logic from Zeeman and anisotropic exchange interactions
- 20 December 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 66 (6) , 062314
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.66.062314
Abstract
Some of the most promising proposals for scalable solid-state quantum computing, e.g., those using electron spins in quantum dots or donor electron or nuclear spins in Si, rely on a two-qubit quantum gate that is ideally generated by an isotropic exchange interaction. However, an anisotropic perturbation arising from spin-orbit coupling is inevitably present. Previous studies focused on removing the anisotropy. Here we introduce a new universal set of quantum logic gates that takes advantage of the anisotropic perturbation. The price is a constant but modest factor in additional pulses. The gain is a scheme that is compatible with the naturally available interactions in spin-based solid-state quantum computers.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Universal Quantum Computation with Spin-Pairs and Heisenberg ExchangePhysical Review Letters, 2002
- Creating Decoherence-Free Subspaces Using Strong and Fast PulsesPhysical Review Letters, 2002
- Power of anisotropic exchange interactions: Universality and efficient codes for quantum computingPhysical Review A, 2002
- Universal quantum computation and simulation using any entangling Hamiltonian and local unitariesPhysical Review A, 2002
- Cancellation of Spin-Orbit Effects in Quantum Gates Based on the Exchange Coupling in Quantum DotsPhysical Review Letters, 2002
- Anisotropic Spin Exchange in Pulsed Quantum GatesPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Quantum-information processing with ferroelectrically coupled quantum dotsPhysical Review A, 2001
- Anisotropic exchange interaction of localized conduction-band electrons in semiconductorsPhysical Review B, 2001
- Electron-spin-resonance transistors for quantum computing in silicon-germanium heterostructuresPhysical Review A, 2000
- Quantum computation with quantum dotsPhysical Review A, 1998