Quantum Computing, Secure
Communications Closer to Reality; UCLA Scientists Control a Single
Electron’s Spin
Date: July 6, 2004
Contact: Stuart Wolpert(stuartw@college.ucla.edu)
Phone: 310-206-0511
Quantum computing, which holds the promise of
nearly unlimited processing power, secure communications and the
ability to decode encrypted conversations by terrorists and others,
is a significant step closer to becoming a reality today with
new research published by a team of UCLA scientists in the journal
Nature.

Researchers Hong Wen Jiang, professor of
physics. |
The UCLA team succeeded in flipping a single electron
spin upside down in an ordinary commercial transistor chip, and
detected that the current changes when the electron flips. Their
report of controlling and detecting a single electron's spin is
published in the July 22 issue of Nature.
Scientists had manipulated millions of electron spins in a transistor
before. "We have gone from millions to just one," said
Hong Wen Jiang, a UCLA professor of physics and member of the
California NanoSystems Institute, in whose laboratory the experiments
were conducted.
"Our research demonstrates that an ordinary
transistor, the kind used in a desktop PC or cell phone, can be
adapted for practical quantum computing," Jiang said. The
research makes quantum computing closer and more practical, he
added.
A single electron spin represents a quantum bit,
the fundamental building block of a quantum computer.
Many scientists believe that an exotic new technology
would be required for quantum computing. However, Jiang said,
"I would not be surprised one day to see a quantum computer
built, based almost entirely on silicon technology."
"We have measured a single electron spin
in an ordinary transistor; this means that conventional silicon
technology is adaptable enough, and powerful enough, to accommodate
the future electronic requirements of new technologies like quantum
computing, which will depend on spin," said Eli Yablonovitch,
UCLA professor of electrical engineering, director of UCLA's Center
for Nanoscience Innovation for Defense, member of the California
NanoSystems Institute and co-author of the Nature paper.

Eli Yablonovitch, professor of electrical
engineering. |
"We've done this with a commercial silicon
integrated circuit chip, literally off a shelf," Yablonovitch
said. "Silicon is the dominant technology of our time, and
will remain so for some time. For those who think silicon has
too many limitations, silicon technology is surprisingly adaptable,
enough so to meet the futuristic requirements of the 21st century.
In the electronics of the 21st century, we will manipulate single
electron spins not just the charge of the electron, but
the spin of the electron."
When quantum computing becomes a reality, the
government may be able to use it to eavesdrop on terrorists and
quickly break sophisticated secret codes, Yablonovitch said. Quantum
computing will use quantum physics to communicate much more securely;
if someone tries to intercept a quantum message, the information
would be destroyed, Jiang said. Perhaps future elections will
be held using secure quantum voting.
"We've manipulated one spin," Yablonovitch
said. "A year from now, manipulating a single spin might
be all in a day's work, and in 10 years, perhaps it will have
a commercial role."
If manipulating a single electron's spin will
soon seem routine, until now it has been anything but. Jiang and
his UCLA graduate student Ming Xiao worked day and night to achieve
this goal, and thought about quitting more than once.
"There were so many unknowns," Jiang
said, "but our initial theoretical calculations were very
favorable, and gave us confidence to persevere."
While flipping a single electron was difficult,
detecting that they had actually done so proved even harder.
"We couldn't tell whether it was flipping,"
Jiang said. "It was like looking for a needle in a haystack."
Making the detection was like searching an enormous
basket filled with thousands of balls, all the same color, and
trying to find the one that is just slightly different in size.
(The detected electron spin has a slightly different frequency
from the others.)
Jiang and Xiao succeeded in working with the transistor
at low temperatures: minus more than 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Jiang
and Yablonovitch have ideas for operating in the future at room
temperature, which would be much more practical commercially.
Jiang and Xiao's method for controlling the electron
was to shine a microwave radio frequency to flip the spin of the
electron. The experiments last but a fraction of a second, but
required years of work to reach this point.
Electrons rotate like spinning tops. The UCLA
team can target a single electron and control when it is right
side up and when it is upside down by changing the microwave frequency.
Two other research groups, one from IBM and one
from the Netherlands, also are reporting the detection of a single
electron spin. The groups used different methods to measure a
single electron spin.
How powerful can quantum computing be?
"With 100 transistors, each containing one
of these electrons, you could have the implicit information storage
that corresponds to all of the hard disks made in the world this
year, multiplied by the number of years the universe has been
around," Yablonovitch said. "And why stop with 100 transistors?"
A next step is to demonstrate the "entanglement"
of two spins, where the orientation of one electron determines
the orientation of the other a puzzle identified by Albert
Einstein.
The research, a combination of physics and engineering,
was funded by the United States Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency, the United States Defense MicroElectronics Activity and
the Center for Nanoscience Innovation for Defense.
Ivar Martin, a theoretical physicist at Los Alamos
National Laboratory, is a co-author on the Nature paper.
In the late 1990s, Yablonovitch formed a team
of physicists, engineers, materials scientists and mathematicians
to create an electronic device that could some day be used for
quantum information processing.
"The collaboration with Eli has been my best
experience at UCLA," Jiang said. "This is an exciting
time for nanoscience and technology."
Jiang often monitors experiments from home in
the middle of the night.
"It's so exciting," he said, "I
don't want to wait until morning to know the outcome of the experiments."
|