Seminars & Speakers
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게시물 정보
추가 정보 영역
Speaker | Sang-Yun Lee |
Affiliation | KIST |
URL | Link |
Date | September 12, 2018 |
Time | 4:00 pm |
Venue | Building 110 Room N103 |
Sponsor | UNIST-Natural Science |
Host | 김제형 |
Contact | jehyungkim@unist.ac.kr |
Phone | 052-217-3606 |
High purity single crystalline solids can be used as a robust platform for quantum information research
since isolated defects, which resemble isolated single atoms when phonon coupling is efficiently
suppressed, can be created in the middle of almost noise-free environment. Among various defects
which can be created artificially, color center in wide-bandgap semiconductors such as diamond
and silicon carbide have been used to demonstrate various proof-of-idea experiments for quantum
information and also various quantum applications such as quantum metrology. Even though small size
integrated qubit devices consisting of a few entangled spin qubits have been demonstrated, there
remain open questions about whether this physical system will allow building large quantum devices in
which many qubits can interact with each other without losing their coherent properties.
Managing spin-spin interaction among defects spins near each other is a typical method to enable
quantum connection among spin qubits. In addition, the optical transitions strongly correlated with spin
states of the color centers allow another pathway for integrating individual qubits. One example is the
photonic quantum network which can meditate entanglement among distant spin qubits via spin-
selective optical transitions. The spin-to-photon interface based on a color center in diamond has shown
the entanglement rate exceeding the decoherence rate of two distant spin qubits. In parallel, there have
been efforts for finding novel color centers in various large bandgap materials whose ability as a spin-to-
photon interface may exceed that of the diamond color centers. The color centers in silicon carbide are
candidates since well-developed device fabrication techniques exist and efficient spin-to-photon
interfaces have been found recently. In this presentation, a broad review about the quantum technology
based on color centers in solids will be provided, and a summary about recent progresses will be presented as well.