(Press-News.org) 7 June 2012: Element Six, the world leader in synthetic diamond supermaterials, working in partnership with academics in Harvard University, California Institute of Technology and Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik, has used its Element Six single crystal synthetic diamond grown by chemical vapour deposition (CVD) to demonstrate the capability of quantum bit memory to exceed one second at room temperature.
This study demonstrated the ability of synthetic diamond to provide the read-out of a quantum bit which had preserved its spin polarisation for several minutes and its memory coherence for over a second. This is the first time that such long memory times have been reported for a material at room temperature, giving synthetic diamond a significant advantage over rival materials and technologies that require complex infrastructure which necessitates, for example, cryogenic cooling.
The versatility, robustness, and potential scalability of this synthetic diamond system may allow for new applications in quantum information science and quantum based sensors used, for example, in nano-scale imaging of chemical/biological processes.
The synthetic diamond technical work was completed by the Element Six synthetic diamond R&D team based at Ascot in the UK who developed novel processes for growing synthetic diamond using chemical vapour deposition (CVD) techniques. Steve Coe, Element Six Group Innovation Director, explained the success of the collaboration:
"The field of synthetic diamond science is moving very quickly and is requiring Element Six to develop synthesis processes with impurity control at the level of parts per trillion – real nano-engineering control of CVD diamond synthesis. We have been working closely with Professor Lukin's team in Harvard for three years - this result published in Science is an example of how successful this collaboration has been."
Professor Mikhail Lukin of Harvard University's Department of Physics described the significance of the research findings:
"Element Six's unique and engineered synthetic diamond material has been at the heart of these important developments. The demonstration of a single qubit quantum memory with seconds of storage time at room temperature is a very exciting development, which combines the four key requirements of initialisation, memory, control and measurement. These findings might one day lead to novel quantum communication and computation technologies, but in the nearer term may enable a range of novel and disruptive quantum sensor technologies, such as those being targeted to image magnetic fields on the nano-scale for use in imaging chemical and biological processes."
The findings represent the latest developments in quantum information processing, which involves manipulating individual atomic sized impurities in synthetic diamond and exploiting the quantum property spin of an individual electron, which can be thought of classically as a bar magnet having two states: up (1) and down (0). However, in the quantum mechanical description (physics of the very small), this quantum spin (qubit) can be both 0 and 1 simultaneously. It is this property that provides a framework for quantum computing, but also for more immediate applications such as novel magnetic sensing technologies.
INFORMATION:
Notes to Editors:
About Element Six
Element Six is an independently managed synthetic diamond supermaterials company. Element Six is part of the De Beers Family of Companies and is co-owned by Umicore, the Belgian materials group. Element Six is a global leader in the design, development and production of synthetic diamond supermaterials, and operates worldwide with its head office registered in Luxembourg, and primary manufacturing facilities in China, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, South Africa and the UK.
Element Six supermaterial solutions are used in applications such as cutting, grinding, drilling, shearing and polishing, while the extreme properties of synthetic diamond beyond hardness are already opening up new applications in a wide array of industries such as optics, power transmission, water treatment, semi-conductors and sensors.
The quantum information research collaboration
The study was a collaboration between the following organisations:
Element Six, Ascot, UK,
Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
Institute for Quantum Information and Matter, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA.
Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik, Garching, Germany.
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
Funding for some of this research was provided by the DARPA QuASAR programme.
The results of the research appear in an article in Science magazine, published 8 June 2012.
Technical details of the research
Key to the material aspect of achieving this result was producing synthetic diamond with essentially no spin impurities other than a very specific defect called the N-V (nitrogen vacancy) centre (a vacancy next to a nitrogen atom in the diamond lattice). This 'N-V centre' has very specific properties in that it can be spin polarised (similar to the magnetic difference of North-South or South-North of a bar magnet at room temperature) using a simple green light source. Subsequently, the state of the N-V centre can be read out again using simple techniques within a period limited by the quantum de-coherence time.
The isotope carbon-12 forms 98.9% of the carbon usually found in synthetic diamond, while carbon-13 forms the remaining 1.1%. Carbon 13 has a nuclear spin, which through random thermally driven interactions can interact with the electronic spin of the N-V impurity. Removing as many of these nuclear spins while still maintaining the general high purity of the material was a milestone result for the Element Six CVD R&D team.
Specific to Harvard's breakthrough was to use a carbon-13 nuclear spin (that was still present) to couple with the N-V electronic spin. While the electron spin has a good de-coherence time, it still fluctuates on the millisecond timescale. Once the electron spin changes its spin, the quantum information (qubit) is lost. A single flip in the electronic spin completely destroys the coherence of the carbon-13 nuclear spin. To prevent the electron flips from affecting the nucleus, the Harvard team reset the electron's spin with green laser light, essentially turning off the interaction between the electron and nucleus when that interaction is not needed. This had the result of creating very fast electron flips which do no interact with the nuclear spin – effectively a non-fluctuating average field.
In combination with this method, the Harvard research team used a sequence of radio-frequency pulses to suppress interactions with other carbon nuclei in the synthetic diamond. As a result, they were able to store quantum information at room temperatures for nearly two seconds, which was significantly more than anticipated when the research commenced. Previous experiments in quantum information have generally demonstrated single qubit memory storage times to be in microseconds.
Further information
For further information, please contact Iain Hutchison, Element Six Group Communications and Brand Manager on:
email: iain.hutchison@e6.com, telephone: +44 20 8742 4949, mobile: +44 7717 838286
Element Six and Harvard University collaboration sets a new quantum information record
Using synthetic diamond, quantum bit memory can now exceed one second at room temperature, opening up the potential for new solid state quantum based sensors and quantum information processing
2012-06-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mrs. Alaska, Brandy Wendler, Partners with Find Me Gluten Free to Raise Awareness for the Gluten Free Community
2012-06-08
Find Me Gluten Free, the most downloaded gluten-free restaurant and business finder app for iPhone and Android announces partnership with Brandy Wendler, Mrs. Alaska International 2012 to create awareness for the Celiac Disease and Gluten Free Community.
Find Me Gluten Free rates businesses on how gluten-free friendly they are, making it easier to find a restaurant which users can be confident will take preparing a gluten-free meal seriously, along with serving as a brand-finder at stores nationwide.
Brandy Wendler was diagnosed with Celiac Disease in 2008. It was ...
NationaLease Spring Maintenance Managers Meeting Generates New Ideas, Provides Training, Inspires Attendees
2012-06-08
The NationaLease Spring Maintenance Managers Meeting in Greenville, SC, in May provided attendees with a stimulating mix of technology, product, and professional education, as well as a strong measure of motivation and inspiration provided by its keynote speaker, Jay Blake, racing's only blind race crew chief.
The four-day event also included a ceremony announcing NationaLease's Exceptional Service Award winners, which are NationaLease member companies that provided particularly outstanding reciprocal road service to fellow members throughout the year. "This year's ...
Notre Dame research shows food-trade network vulnerable to fast spread of contaminants
2012-06-08
University of Notre Dame network physicists Mária Ercsey-Ravasz and Zoltán Toroczkai of the Interdisciplinary Center for Network Science and Applications, in collaboration with food science experts, have recently published a rigorous analysis of the international food-trade network that shows the network's vulnerability to the fast spread of contaminants as well as the correlation between known food poisoning outbreaks and the centrality of countries on the network.
Together with food science experts József Baranyi, from the Institute of Food Research in the U.K., and ...
VCU researchers identify changes in cholesterol metabolic pathways
2012-06-08
RICHMOND, Va. (June 7, 2012) – A new study from the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine has identified molecular changes responsible for abnormal cholesterol production and metabolism in the livers of patients with a common liver condition, and these changes may explain the severity of a patient's liver disease and risks to their heart health.
It is estimated that a third of Americans have a fatty liver. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is a very common liver condition. Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH, the more aggressive form of nonalcoholic fatty ...
Currencies Direct: Is America Losing its Manufacturing Muscle?
2012-06-08
Earlier in the week the US government confirmed economic growth in America had stalled during the first-quarter of the year, as gross domestic product (GDP) rose by just 1.9% from January through to May, reports currency exchange experts, Currencies Direct.
Initially the department of commerce expected GDP to be around the 2.2% mark. However, cuts in private sector jobs were said to have stained prior optimism.
According to figures published by outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas, US employers cut 61,887 jobs in May, the most since September 2011. ...
Identification of differential proteins in maternal serum with Down syndrome
2012-06-08
Prenatal screening for Down syndrome (DS) is still in need of improvement. Perinatal medicine experts have worked hard to find new biomarkers for screening of DS. Dr. Shi he Shao and his co-investigators, from Jiangsu University and Changzhou Woman and Children Health Hospital, report in the May 2012 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine that they have successfully identified twenty-nine differentially expressed proteins in maternal serum from pregnancies carrying DS fetuses with proteomic approaches. These differential proteins offer the possibility of improving the ...
Hanni's New Wine Fundamentals Webinars Praised, Offered in June
2012-06-08
Tim Hanni's New Wine Fundamentals Webinars, held for the first time in May, attracted international attendance and will be repeated June 19 and 23. The webinar offers an introduction to taste and other sensations, improved wine communications, and a new paradigm for understanding the physical and psychological factors in wine preferences and consumer behavior. One attendee wrote, "It altered the way I work...(Tim) is challenging us to align the 'rules' to the reality of our customers."
The Webinar is a two-hour "learn and train the trainer" session ...
NASA provides satellite views of Maryland's severe weather outbreak
2012-06-08
VIDEO:
A cold front approaching from the west spawned severe storms along the East Coast, on June 1, 2012, including nine weak tornadoes in Maryland around sunset. From the GOES satellite...
Click here for more information.
On Friday, June 1, 2012 severe weather generated 9 weak tornadoes across Maryland, according to the National Weather Service. As the system that generated them approached, NASA's Aqua satellite gathered information about power behind it. NASA also created ...
ZEV Begins Delivery of the ZEV 5000 High Performance, Low Priced, Electric Motor Scooter
2012-06-08
The launch of the 5000 LA might seem a bit in conflict with the ZEV image of high performance. ZEV is mostly known for its high tech, 100 mile (160 km) range / 75 - 80 mph (120 - 130 kmh) speed lithium battery powered bikes. Equally, the public has seemed to keep its focus on new and exotic battery technology. But for the vast majority of the population, their needs and use patterns could best be served by a new approach, rather than a new technology. The vast majority of the public needs a vehicle to commute to work less than 20 miles. The achieved goal of the new 5000 ...
Scientists find that rain may not always be a welcome thing to waterbirds
2012-06-08
Scientists from the Smithsonian and colleagues have found that waterbird communities can be the "canary in the coal mine" when it comes to detecting the health of urban estuary ecosystems. Their research revealed that the types of waterbirds that inhabit urban estuaries are influenced not only by urban development, but also by a far more natural process―rain. The team's findings are published in the scientific journal PLoS ONE.
The scientists compared waterbird communities in estuaries of the Chesapeake Bay during 2002, a year of severe drought, to 2003, a year ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Synchronization in neural nets: Mathematical insight into neuron readout drives significant improvements in prediction accuracy
TLE6 identified as a protein associated with infertility in male mice
Thin lenses have a bright future
Volcanic eruption caused Neolithic people to sacrifice unique "sun stones"
Drug in clinical trials for breast cancer could also treat some blood cancers
Study identifies mechanism underlying increased osteoarthritis risk in postmenopausal females
The material revolution: How USA’s commodity appetite evolved from 1900 to present
Asteroid impact sulfur release less lethal in dinosaur extinction
Study shows seed impact mills clobber waterhemp seed viability
Study links rising suicidality among teen girls to increase in identifying as LGBQ
Mind’s eye: Pineal gland photoreceptor’s 2 genes help fish detect color
Nipah virus: epidemiology, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention
FDA ban on Red Dye 3 and more are highlighted in Sylvester Cancer's January tip sheet
Mapping gene regulation
Exposure to air pollution before pregnancy linked to higher child body mass index, study finds
Neural partially linear additive model
Dung data: manure can help to improve global maps of herbivore distribution
Concerns over maternity provision for pregnant women in UK prisons
UK needs a national strategy to tackle harms of alcohol, argue experts
Aerobic exercise: a powerful ally in the fight against Alzheimer’s
Cambridge leads first phase of governmental project to understand impact of smartphones and social media on young people
AASM Foundation partners with Howard University Medical Alumni Association to provide scholarships
Protective actions need regulatory support to fully defend homeowners and coastal communities, study finds
On-chip light control of semiconductor optoelectronic devices using integrated metasurfaces
America’s political house can become less divided
A common antihistamine shows promise in treating liver complications of a rare disease complication
Trastuzumab emtansine improves long-term survival in HER2 breast cancer
Is eating more red meat bad for your brain?
How does Tourette syndrome differ by sex?
Red meat consumption increases risk of dementia and cognitive decline
[Press-News.org] Element Six and Harvard University collaboration sets a new quantum information recordUsing synthetic diamond, quantum bit memory can now exceed one second at room temperature, opening up the potential for new solid state quantum based sensors and quantum information processing