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Quantum Computing with Graphene Nanoribbons

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  • UserIrati Alonso Calafell, University of Vienna
  • ClockFriday 02 October 2020, 11:00-12:00
  • HouseVirtually, at Zoom.

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Among the various approaches to quantum computing, all-optical architectures are especially promising due to the robustness and mobility of single photons. However, the creation of the two- photon quantum logic gates required for universal quantum computing remains a challenge. Here we propose a universal two-qubit quantum logic gate, where qubits are encoded in surface plasmons in graphene nanostructures, that exploits graphene’s strong third-order nonlinearity and long plasmon lifetimes to enable single-photon-level interactions. In particular, we utilize strong two-plasmon absorption in graphene nanoribbons, which can greatly exceed single-plasmon absorption to create a “square-root-of-swap” that is protected by the quantum Zeno effect against evolution into undesired failure modes. Our gate does not require any cryogenic or vacuum technology, has a footprint of a few hundred nanometers, and reaches fidelities and success rates well above the fault-tolerance threshold, suggesting that graphene plasmonics offers a route towards scalable quantum technologies.

References

1) Alonso Calafell, et al. npj Quantum Information 5, 37 (2019), https://www.nature.com/articles/s41534-019-0150-2

Zoom Link

Please click the link below to join the webinar: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86846521451?pwd=M0VUSE5wTEJwSndCbEx0VUtqNHpuZz09 Passcode: 226745

This talk is part of the Cavendish Quantum Information Seminar Series series.

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