"For
the market, quantum computers mean better encryption
methods and heightened data security. For science,
our research may help address the longstanding mystery
of the relationship between the classical physics
of the world we see every day, and the peculiar world
of quantum physics that governs the tiny particles
inside atoms."
The
research will appear in the current (April 30) issue
of Physical Review Letters. The lead author is Jeng-Chung
Chen, who received his doctorate at Purdue and is
now at the University of Tokyo. Co-authors are Chang,
who in 2003 relocated from Purdue to Duke University,
where he is a professor of physics, and Michael. R.
Melloch, a professor in Purdue's School of Electrical
and Computer Engineering.
As
computer circuits grow ever smaller, manufacturers
draw nearer to the time when their chips' tiny on-off
switches - representing the 1's and 0's of binary
information, or bits - can be made comparable in size
to a single molecule. At smaller scales, the laws
of classical physics will no longer apply to the switches,
but will be replaced by the laws of the subatomic
world. These laws, described by quantum physics, can
appear strange to the uninitiated.
"An
electron, for example, can behave like a particle
or a wave at times, and it has the odd ability to
seemingly be in two different states at once,"
Chang said. "Physicists need a different set
of words and concepts to describe the behavior of
objects that can do such counterintuitive things.
One concept we use is the 'spin' of an electron, which
we loosely imagine as being similar to the way the
Earth spins each day on its axis. But it also describes
a sort of ordering electrons must obey in one another's
presence: When two electrons occupy the same space,
they must pair with opposite spins, one electron with
'up' spin, the other 'down.'"
Spin
is one property that physicists seek to harness for
memory storage. After collecting 40 to 60 paired electrons
in a puddle within a semiconductor wafer of gallium
arsenide and aluminum gallium arsenide, the team then
added a single additional unpaired electron to the
puddle. This extra electron imparted a net spin of
up or down to the entire puddle, which they call a
quantum dot. The team also built a second quantum
dot nearby with the same net spin.
"When
isolated from one another, the two net spins would
not seek to pair with each other," Chang said.
"But we have a special method of 'tuning' the
two-dot system so that, despite the similar spins,
the two unpaired electrons became 'entangled' - they
begin to interact with one another."
The
team used eight tiny converging wires, or "gates,"
to deposit the electrons in the dots one by one and
then electronically fine-tune the dots' properties
so they would become entangled. With these gates,
the team was able to slowly tune the interacting dots
so they are able to exist in a mixed, down-up and
up-down configuration simultaneously. In each dot,
an up or down configuration would represent a 1 or
0 in a quantum bit, or "qubit," for possible
use in memory chips.
"Entanglement
is a key property that would help give a quantum computer
its power," Chang said. "Because each system
exists in this mixed, down-up configuration, it may
allow us to create switches that are both on and off
at the same time. That's something current computer
switches can't do."
Large
groups of qubits could be used to solve problems that
have myriad potential solutions that must be winnowed
down quickly, such as factoring the very large numbers
used in data encryption.
"A
desktop computer performs single operations one after
another in series," Chang said. "It's fast,
but if you could do all those operations together,
in parallel rather than in series, it can be exponentially
faster. In the encryption world, solving some problems
could take centuries with a conventional computer."
But
for a quantum computer, whose bits can be in two quantum
states at once - both on and off at the same time
- many solutions could, in theory, be explored simultaneously,
allowing for a solution in hours rather than lifetimes.
"These
computers would have massive parallelism built right
in, allowing for the solution of many tough problems,"
Chang said. "But for us physicists, the possibilities
of quantum computers extend beyond any single application.
There also exists the potential to explore why there
seem to be two kinds of reality in the universe -
one of which, in everyday language, is said to stop
when you cross the border 'into the interior of the
atom.'"
Because
a quantum computer would require all its qubits to
behave according to quantum rules, its processor could
itself serve as a laboratory for exploring the quantum
world.
"Such
a computer would have to exhibit 'quantum coherence,'
meaning its innards would be a large-scale system
with quantum properties rather than classical ones,"
Chang said. "When quantum systems interact with
the classical world, they tend to lose their coherence
and decay into classical behavior, but the quantum-dot
system we have built exhibits naturally long-lasting
coherence. As an entire large-scale system that can
behave like a wave or a particle, it may provide windows
into the nature of the universe we cannot otherwise
easily explore."
The
system would not have to be large; each dot has a
width of only about 200 nanometers, or billionths
of a meter. About 5,000 of them placed end to end
would stretch across the diameter of a grain of sand.
But Chang said that his group's system had another,
greater advantage even than its minuscule size.
"Qubits
have been created before using other methods,"
he said. "But ours have a potential advantage.
It seems possible to scale them up into large systems
that can work together because we can control their
behavior more effectively. Many systems are limited
to a handful of qubits at most, far too few to be
useful in real-world computers."
For
now, though, the team's qubit works too slowly to
be used as the basis of a marketable device. Chang
said the team would next concentrate on improving
the speed at which they can manipulate the spin of
the electrons.
"Essentially,
what we've done is just a physics experiment, no more,"
he said. "In the future, we'll need to manipulate
the spin at very fast rates. But for the moment, we
have, for the first time, demonstrated the entanglement
of two quantum dots and shown that we can control
its properties with great precision. It offers hope
that we can reach that future within a decade or so."
This
research was funded in part by the National Science
Foundation.
Writer: Chad Boutin, (765) 494-2081, cboutin@purdue.edu