Compromise-free scaling of qubit speed and coherence
Miguel J. Carballido (University of Basel)
Simon Svab (University of Basel)
Rafael S. Eggli (University of Basel)
Taras Patlatiuk (University of Basel)
Pierre Chevalier Kwon (University of Basel)
Jonas Schuff (University of Oxford)
Ang Li (Eindhoven University of Technology)
Erik P.A.M. Bakkers (Eindhoven University of Technology)
Stefano Bosco (University of Basel)
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Abstract
Across leading qubit platforms, a common trade-off persists: increasing coherence comes at the cost of operational speed, reflecting the notion that protecting a qubit from its noisy surroundings also limits control over it. This speed-coherence dilemma limits qubit performance across various technologies. Here, we demonstrate a hole spin qubit in a Ge/Si core/shell nanowire that triples its Rabi frequency while simultaneously quadrupling its Hahn-echo coherence time, boosting the Q-factor by over an order of magnitude. This is enabled by the direct Rashba spin-orbit interaction, emerging from heavy-hole-light-hole mixing through strong confinement in two dimensions. Tuning a gate voltage causes this interaction to peak, providing maximum drive speed and a point where the qubit is optimally protected from charge noise, allowing speed and coherence to scale together. Our proof-of-concept shows that careful dot design can overcome a long-standing limitation, offering a new approach towards building high-performance, fault-tolerant qubits.