Multi-Qubit Entanglement of Unit Cell Pairs in SiMOS
Pith reviewed 2026-05-21 05:41 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A four-qubit silicon-MOS processor generates and certifies maximally entangled three-qubit states including GHZ while extending their lifetime with dynamic decoupling.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We present a two unit cell, four-qubit SiMOS processor with universal controllability and fully parallelised state initialisation and readout. We use this processor to generate maximally entangled three-qubit states, including the Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state, and certify multipartite entanglement through violation of the classical Mermin-witness bound. By using a fully symmetric dynamically decoupled gate sequence to create our entangled states, we are able to preserve the lifetime of the entanglement beyond T2*, to a time limited instead by T2^Hahn.
What carries the argument
The two-unit-cell four-qubit SiMOS processor operated with a fully symmetric dynamically decoupled gate sequence that generates the entangled states and suppresses decoherence.
If this is right
- Coupling between unit cells becomes feasible for larger SiMOS arrays.
- Long-lived multi-qubit entangled states can be prepared with fidelity limited by Hahn echo coherence rather than faster dephasing.
- Parallel initialization and readout reduce overhead for scaling to more qubits in CMOS-compatible hardware.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same symmetric decoupling approach could be tested on other silicon qubit designs to check if entanglement lifetime gains generalize beyond this processor.
- Certified three-qubit GHZ states in silicon may serve as a resource for small-scale quantum error correction protocols that rely on genuine multipartite entanglement.
- Parallel readout demonstrated here suggests that measurement times for larger entangled registers could be shortened without sacrificing the certification step.
Load-bearing premise
The observed violation of the Mermin-witness bound with the symmetric dynamically decoupled sequence certifies genuine multipartite entanglement without being undermined by systematic errors, crosstalk between unit cells, or state-preparation imperfections.
What would settle it
Repeating the three-qubit entanglement protocol while deliberately introducing measurable crosstalk or preparation errors and checking whether the Mermin-witness value still exceeds the classical bound would test whether the certification remains valid.
Figures
read the original abstract
Spin qubits in silicon-MOS (SiMOS) quantum dots have recently demonstrated compatibility with existing industry standard CMOS fabrication techniques. These devices have routinely achieved single- and two-qubit gate fidelities above 99% and demonstrated highly entangled two-qubit Bell states in isolated double quantum dot (DQD) unit cells, however coupling between unit cells has remained challenging. In this work, we present a two unit cell, four-qubit SiMOS processor with universal controllability and fully parallelised state initialisation and readout. We use this processor to generate maximally entangled three-qubit states, including the Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) state, and certify multipartite entanglement through violation of the classical Mermin-witness bound. By using a fully symmetric dynamically decoupled gate sequence to create our entangled states, we are able to preserve the lifetime of the entanglement beyond $T_2^*$, to a time limited instead by $T_2^\textrm{Hahn}$. These demonstrations pave a road to the scalable operation of larger SiMOS processors, and achieving high purity, long-lived multi-qubit entangled states in them.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper reports a two-unit-cell, four-qubit SiMOS processor with universal controllability and parallel initialization/readout. It demonstrates generation of maximally entangled three-qubit states (including GHZ), certifies multipartite entanglement via violation of the classical Mermin-witness bound, and extends the entanglement lifetime from T2* to T2^Hahn using a fully symmetric dynamically decoupled gate sequence.
Significance. If the quantitative certification and error bounds hold, the work addresses a key scalability bottleneck in SiMOS devices by showing controllable coupling between unit cells while preserving high-fidelity multi-qubit entanglement. The combination of parallel readout, dynamical decoupling, and Mermin-witness violation provides a concrete experimental step toward larger silicon-based processors with long-lived entangled states.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that the observed Mermin-witness violation certifies genuine multipartite (three-qubit) entanglement is load-bearing, yet no numerical witness value, statistical significance, error bars, or measurement count is reported, preventing verification that the violation exceeds what could arise from uncharacterized crosstalk or SPAM errors.
- [Main text (entanglement generation and certification)] Main text (entanglement generation and certification): the fully symmetric dynamically decoupled sequence is asserted to produce states whose correlations certify genuine tripartite entanglement, but the manuscript provides no quantitative upper bound on inter-unit-cell crosstalk or full SPAM fidelity matrix that would be required to exclude effective pairwise correlations mimicking the Mermin witness.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the phrase 'preserve the lifetime of the entanglement beyond T2*, to a time limited instead by T2^Hahn' would benefit from an explicit definition or reference to the precise Hahn-echo or dynamical-decoupling sequence parameters used.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their careful reading of the manuscript and for highlighting these important points regarding the presentation of the entanglement certification. We address each major comment below and will incorporate revisions to provide the requested quantitative details and supporting analysis.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that the observed Mermin-witness violation certifies genuine multipartite (three-qubit) entanglement is load-bearing, yet no numerical witness value, statistical significance, error bars, or measurement count is reported, preventing verification that the violation exceeds what could arise from uncharacterized crosstalk or SPAM errors.
Authors: We agree that the abstract would benefit from explicit reporting of the Mermin-witness value, associated uncertainties, statistical significance, and experimental shot count to allow immediate verification. In the revised manuscript we will update the abstract to include these quantities (e.g., the measured witness value with error bars derived from the full dataset) while preserving the overall length and readability. revision: yes
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Referee: [Main text (entanglement generation and certification)] Main text (entanglement generation and certification): the fully symmetric dynamically decoupled sequence is asserted to produce states whose correlations certify genuine tripartite entanglement, but the manuscript provides no quantitative upper bound on inter-unit-cell crosstalk or full SPAM fidelity matrix that would be required to exclude effective pairwise correlations mimicking the Mermin witness.
Authors: The referee is correct that explicit quantitative bounds on inter-unit-cell crosstalk and the complete SPAM fidelity matrix strengthen the exclusion of pairwise-mimicking correlations. Although the symmetric decoupling sequence and parallel readout are designed to suppress such effects, the current text does not supply the numerical upper limits. We will add a dedicated paragraph (and associated supplementary figures) reporting the measured crosstalk upper bound from calibration experiments and the full SPAM matrix, together with a short analysis demonstrating that the observed witness violation remains inconsistent with the maximum possible spurious correlations allowed by these bounds. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: experimental results are direct measurements
full rationale
The paper is an experimental demonstration of multi-qubit entanglement generation and certification in a SiMOS device. Claims rest on observed Mermin-witness violations, state preparation, and gate sequences whose outcomes are measured directly rather than derived from equations that reduce to the paper's own fitted inputs or self-citations. No self-definitional steps, fitted parameters renamed as predictions, or load-bearing uniqueness theorems imported from prior author work appear in the provided text. The work is self-contained against external benchmarks (T2*, T2^Hahn, gate fidelities) and does not invoke mathematical derivations that loop back by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
certify multipartite entanglement through violation of the classical Mermin-witness bound... fully symmetric dynamically decoupled gate sequence
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IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.leanwashburn_uniqueness_aczel unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
GST... single-qubit on-target fidelities above 99%
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
Reference graph
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The array is held in the (N P1,NP2,NP3,NP4) = (4,4,4,4) charge configuration to ensure both DQDs relax to ground singlet state prior to initialisation
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This ramp rate is tuned such that a high purity |Q1,Q 2,Q 3,Q 4⟩=|↓↑↑↓⟩state is populated
The detuning in both pairs is ramped adiabatically, from the (4,4,4,4) charge configuration to (3,5,5,3). This ramp rate is tuned such that a high purity |Q1,Q 2,Q 3,Q 4⟩=|↓↑↑↓⟩state is populated. A fixed ramp rate is used for both DQDs, however the J1/J3 voltages applied when moving through the anti-crossing. This allows each DQD to be tuned independentl...
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Readout is performed in both DQD unit cells to measure Z-basis parity of both qubit pairs MZZ(Q1,Q 2),M ZZ(Q3,Q 4). 10
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The FPGA is used to execute a real-time logical condition. If even parity is measured in both unit cells (M ZZ(Q1,Q 2) =M ZZ(Q3,Q 4) = 0), the initialisation is considered successful and the sequence progresses to quantum circuit execution. If either or both of the measurements register odd parity,M ZZ = 1, the reinitialisation process is restarted from s...
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[58]
Uncertainties are given in parentheses correspond to2σ error. Measurement Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 fRabi (kHz) 183.2(8) 680.9(4) 442.5(2) 624.1(3) TRabi 2 (µs) 13.6(18) 29.2(10) 45.9(20) 32.4(19) T∗ 2 (µs) 3.1(2) 6.2(5) 4.8(2) 5.5(3) THahn 2 (µs) 64.0(104) 87.2(34) 76.3(29) 79.4(34) Extended Data Table II|Single-qubit gate fidelity. All fidelity estimates obtained usi...
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[59]
T2 data Rabi Ramsey Q4Q3Q2Q1 32.4ሺ19ሻ45.9ሺ20ሻ29.2ሺ10ሻ13.6ሺ18ሻTଶ ୖୟୠ୧(μs) 5.5ሺ3ሻ4.8ሺ2ሻ6.2ሺ5ሻ3.1ሺ2ሻTଶ ∗ (μs) 79.4ሺ34ሻ76.3ሺ29ሻ87.2ሺ34ሻ64.0ሺ104ሻTଶ ୌୟ୦୬(μs) Xሺ𝑡ୖୟୠ୧ሻ|↓⟩ Z X|↓⟩ ZIሺ𝑡ୟ୧୲ሻ ሼPଵ୕ሽ Hahn X ZIሺ௧౪ ଶ ሻ ሼPଵ୕ሽX Iሺ௧౪ ଶ ሻ|↓⟩ 𝐓𝟐 Estimates Extended Data Fig. 2|Coherence time measurements.Fitted coherence time data for Rabi, Ramsey and Hahn sequences use...
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[60]
Exchange rate controllability Single qubit gate operating voltage Extended Data Fig. 3|Exchange rate controllability.Exchange rate between Q1-Q2, Q2-Q3 and Q3-Q4 as a function of the voltage offsets∆VJ on exchange gates J1, J2 and J3 respectively. Exchange rates are determined by fitting exchange oscillation measured in dCZ experiments performed at each o...
discussion (0)
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