The full chip mounted on a printed circuit board. Credit: Pita-Vidal, Wesdorp et al.

Quantum computers, computing devices that leverage the principles of quantum mechanics, could outperform classical computing on some complex optimization and processing tasks. In quantum computers, classical units of information (bits), which can either have a value of 1 or 0, are substituted by quantum bits or qubits, which can be in a mixture of both 0 and 1 simultaneously.

Qubits have so far been realized using various physical systems, ranging from electrons to photons and ions. In recent years, some quantum physicists have been experimenting with a new kind of qubits, known as Andreev spin qubits. These qubits leverage the properties of superconducting and to store and manipulate .

A team of researchers at Delft University of Technology, led by Marta Pita-Vidal and Jaap J. Wesdorp, recently demonstrated the strong and tunable coupling between two distant Andreev spin qubits. Their paper, published in Nature Physics, could pave the way towards the effective realization of two- gates between distant spins.

"The recent work is essentially a continuation of our work published last year in Nature Physics," Christian Kraglund Andersen, corresponding author of the paper, told Phys.org. "In this earlier work, we studied a new type of qubit called an Andreev spin qubit, which was also previously demonstrated by researchers at Yale."

Andreev spin qubits simultaneously leverage the advantageous properties of both superconducting and semiconductor qubits. These qubits are essentially created by embedding a quantum dot into a superconducting qubit.

"With the new qubit established, the natural next question was if we could couple two of them," Andersen said. "A theoretical paper published in 2010 suggested a method to couple two such qubits, and our experiment is the first experiment to realize this proposal in the real world."

A zoom-in on the device. To the left, a superconducting qubit (red) is shown coupled to readout and control lines. The two Andreev spin qubits are sitting in the small dashed box. On the right is a zoom in on the part with the two Andreev spins sitting in the two superconducting loops. Credit: Pita-Vidal, Wesdorp et al.

As part of their study, Andersen and his colleagues first fabricated a superconducting circuit. Subsequently, they deposited two semiconductor nanowires on top of this circuit using a precisely controlled needle.

"The way we designed the circuit, the combined nanowire and superconducting circuits created two superconducting loops," Andersen explained. "The special part of these loops is that a part of each loop is a semiconductor quantum dot. In the quantum dot, we can trap an electron. The cool thing is that the current that flows around the loops will now depend on the spin of the trapped electron. This effect is interesting, as it allows us to control a supercurrent of billions of Cooper pairs with a single spin."

The combined current of the two coupled superconducting loops realized by the researchers ultimately depends on the spin in both the quantum dots. This also means that the two spins are coupled via this supercurrent. Notably, this coupling can also be easily controlled, either via the magnetic field running through the loops or by modulating the gate voltage.

More information: Marta Pita-Vidal et al, Strong tunable coupling between two distant superconducting spin qubits, Nature Physics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-024-02497-x

Journal information: Nature Physics