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Implanting Diamonds With Flaws to Provide Key Technology for Quantum Communications


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Small substitutions of atoms in their lattice of carbon atoms allow diamonds to serve as quantum repeaters.

Princeton University researchers have successfully stored and transmitted quantum bits using a diamond in which two carbon atoms had been replaced with one silicon atom.

Credit: Nathalie de Leon lab

Princeton University researchers have successfully stored and transmitted quantum bits (qubits) using a diamond in which two carbon atoms had been replaced with one silicon atom.

Princeton's Nathalie de Leon said the diamonds could function as quantum repeaters for qubit-based networks.

Her team built electrically neutral silicon vacancies within the crystal lattice of the diamond, with research partner Element Six laying down carbon atom layers to create the crystal and then adding boron atoms.

The team implanted silicon ions within the diamond, and heated it to eliminate other impurities that could also contribute charges.

The neutral silicon vacancy can transmit quantum information via photons and store quantum data via electrons.

The next stage will be constructing an interface between the vacancy and the photonic circuits to bring the photons from the network into and out of the vacancy, known as a color center.

From Princeton University
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Abstracts Copyright © 2018 Information Inc., Bethesda, Maryland, USA


 

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