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arxiv: 2606.22067 · v1 · pith:IDOLLOT3new · submitted 2026-06-20 · 🪐 quant-ph

Detector-Grade Germanium as a Low-Disorder Host for Indium-Acceptor Spin Qubits: A Five-Qubit Materials-to-Architecture Design Study

Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 11:53 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🪐 quant-ph
keywords germaniumindium acceptorshole spin qubitsquantum information processingdetector-grade materialspin-orbit couplingimpurity qubitsstatistical qubit register
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The pith

Detector-grade germanium with indium acceptors can host five-qubit spin registers by keeping bulk disorder low enough for hole-spin control.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper sets out to show that ultra-high-purity detector-grade germanium, when doped with indium acceptors at roughly 2 times 10 to the 14 per cubic centimeter, can provide a workable host for bound-hole spin qubits. At that density a one-micrometer-long channel statistically contains about five acceptors, so a register can be selected after fabrication rather than placed atom by atom. The high purity keeps residual electrostatic and strain disorder low, while the valence-band structure supplies spin-orbit coupling that permits fully electrical control and either dipolar or phonon-mediated interactions between qubits. The authors treat direct exchange as a short-range or gate-assisted process and flag phononic-crystal engineering as a later refinement. The work positions this platform as a practical middle step between conventional donor-impurity qubits and fully gate-defined germanium hole devices.

Core claim

Detector-grade Ge can suppress uncontrolled bulk electrostatic and strain disorder to levels compatible with acceptor-hole qubits, while the spin-orbit-active valence-band manifold supports all-electrical control and dipolar or phonon-mediated coupling. A 1 micrometer active channel at the target indium density of 2 times 10 to the 14 per cubic centimeter contains about five acceptors on average, enabling a statistically selected post-fabrication register. Direct exchange is treated as a close-pair or gate-enhanced interaction, and phononic-crystal engineering is identified as a second-stage option for cavity-mediated interactions.

What carries the argument

Indium acceptor bound holes in detector-grade germanium, whose valence-band spin-orbit manifold supplies electrical control and coupling while the low residual-impurity background limits disorder.

If this is right

  • A statistically selected five-qubit register becomes feasible without deterministic atomic placement.
  • All-electrical control of the hole spins follows from the valence-band spin-orbit interaction.
  • Nearest-neighbor coupling can be realized via dipolar or phonon-mediated channels, with direct exchange reserved for close pairs or gate enhancement.
  • Phononic-crystal structures can later suppress unwanted acoustic modes to enable selected cavity-mediated interactions once baseline operation is shown.
  • The platform functions as an intermediate architecture between donor-based impurity qubits and fully gate-defined germanium hole-spin devices.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • If the disorder targets are met, similar high-purity hosts could be explored for other acceptor species or host materials.
  • The statistical-placement approach may reduce the fabrication precision required compared with deterministic donor arrays.
  • Successful demonstration would motivate targeted experiments on interface passivation and charge-noise mitigation in the same material system.
  • Scaling beyond five qubits would depend on whether the same purity level can be maintained in longer channels or two-dimensional arrays.

Load-bearing premise

The residual impurity background near 10 to the 10 per cubic centimeter combined with the chosen indium density will produce acceptable disorder after fabrication without dominant contributions from interfaces, charge noise, or statistical placement variations.

What would settle it

Fabricate a 1 micrometer channel in detector-grade germanium with indium at 2 times 10 to the 14 per cubic centimeter and measure whether the resulting electrostatic and strain disorder permits coherent hole-spin manipulation on timescales longer than the intended coupling rates.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.22067 by A. Prem, D.-M. Mei, K.-M. Dong, N. Budhathoki, S. A. Panamaldeniya, S. Bhattarai, S. Chhetri.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Conceptual design of a five-qubit indium-acceptor platform in detector-grade Ge. [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p006_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Schematic physics of an In acceptor qubit in Ge. In bulk, the acceptor-bound hole inherits [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p008_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Multiscale modeling workflow for the proposed five-qubit In-acceptor platform in detector [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p024_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Conceptual summary of the proposed five-qubit In-acceptor platform in detector-grade [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p042_4.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

Acceptor-bound hole spins in germanium (Ge) offer a promising but underexplored route to semiconductor quantum information processing. We present a theory-guided design study of a detector-grade Ge acceptor-spin platform based on intentionally incorporated indium (In) acceptors in ultra-high-purity Ge. The proposed materials strategy combines a residual impurity background near $10^{10} \mathrm{cm^{-3}}$ with a target In density of approximately $2\times10^{14} \mathrm{cm^{-3}}$, corresponding to an acceptor spacing of about 170 nanometer. A 1 $\mu$m-long active channel with a suitable transverse mode volume can contain about five acceptors on average, enabling a statistically selected post-fabrication register rather than a deterministically placed chain. We analyze the physical basis, device architecture, strain and disorder limits, coupling hierarchy, modeling workflow, fabrication pathway, and scaling prospects. Our results indicate that detector-grade Ge can suppress uncontrolled bulk electrostatic and strain disorder to levels compatible with acceptor-hole qubits, while the spin--orbit-active valence-band manifold supports all-electrical control and dipolar or phonon-mediated coupling. Direct exchange is treated as a close-pair or gate-enhanced interaction rather than the generic mean-spacing coupling. Phononic crystal engineering is identified as a second-stage enhancement for suppressing unwanted acoustic modes and enabling selected cavity-mediated interactions after baseline control, readout, and nearest-neighbor coupling are validated. Remaining challenges include statistical acceptor placement, interface disorder, charge noise, readout integration, and experimental validation. This work identifies detector-grade Ge In-acceptor qubits as a credible intermediate architecture between donor-based impurity qubits and fully gate-defined Ge hole-spin hardware.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 1 minor

Summary. The paper is a theory-guided design study proposing detector-grade Ge with intentionally doped In acceptors (~2×10^14 cm^{-3}, ~170 nm mean spacing) as a host for acceptor-bound hole spin qubits. It claims that the residual impurity background (~10^10 cm^{-3}) suppresses bulk electrostatic and strain disorder sufficiently for a statistically selected five-qubit register in a 1 μm channel, while the valence-band manifold enables all-electrical control and dipolar/phonon-mediated coupling; direct exchange is treated as close-pair or gate-enhanced. The work analyzes architecture, strain/disorder limits, coupling hierarchy, fabrication, and scaling, identifying remaining challenges including interfaces and charge noise.

Significance. If the post-fabrication disorder assumptions hold, the proposal offers a credible intermediate platform between donor-impurity and fully gate-defined hole-spin qubits, with potential for phonon-crystal enhancements. The materials-to-architecture framing and identification of statistical placement as a key issue provide a useful roadmap, though the absence of device data or full electrostatic modeling limits immediate impact.

major comments (2)
  1. [Abstract] Abstract and introduction: the central claim that detector-grade Ge plus 2×10^14 cm^{-3} In acceptors will produce acceptable electrostatic/strain disorder for a five-qubit register relies on order-of-magnitude bulk estimates without quantitative bounds or modeling showing that interface states, charge noise, or statistical placement fluctuations remain sub-dominant. This assumption is load-bearing for the architecture viability but is stated without supporting calculations or simulations.
  2. [Abstract] The analysis of coupling hierarchy treats direct exchange as close-pair only and identifies phonon-mediated coupling as a second-stage option, but provides no explicit threshold calculation (e.g., required coherence time or disorder energy scale) demonstrating compatibility with the target 1 μm channel containing five acceptors on average.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The abstract mentions 'modeling workflow' and 'fabrication pathway' but does not specify the level of detail or any equations used for the disorder estimates.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive comments on our manuscript. We address each major comment below and have made revisions to clarify the scope of our estimates and add supporting calculations where possible.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and introduction: the central claim that detector-grade Ge plus 2×10^14 cm^{-3} In acceptors will produce acceptable electrostatic/strain disorder for a five-qubit register relies on order-of-magnitude bulk estimates without quantitative bounds or modeling showing that interface states, charge noise, or statistical placement fluctuations remain sub-dominant. This assumption is load-bearing for the architecture viability but is stated without supporting calculations or simulations.

    Authors: We agree that the central claim relies on bulk estimates and that interface and charge noise effects are not quantitatively modeled in this design study. The paper explicitly identifies these as remaining challenges. To address the comment, we have revised the abstract to qualify the claims as based on bulk estimates and added a dedicated subsection in the discussion on the need for full electrostatic simulations of interfaces and statistical fluctuations. We cannot perform the full modeling within this work as it would require extensive device-specific simulations beyond the materials-to-architecture scope. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Abstract] The analysis of coupling hierarchy treats direct exchange as close-pair only and identifies phonon-mediated coupling as a second-stage option, but provides no explicit threshold calculation (e.g., required coherence time or disorder energy scale) demonstrating compatibility with the target 1 μm channel containing five acceptors on average.

    Authors: The coupling analysis is based on the mean inter-acceptor distance of ~170 nm, at which direct exchange is exponentially suppressed and only relevant for rare close pairs. We have now included an explicit estimate in the revised manuscript: the residual impurity disorder sets an energy scale of order 1-10 μeV, implying a minimum coherence time of ~100 ns to 1 μs for coherent operations in the 1 μm channel. This threshold is compatible with reported acceptor spin coherence times in similar systems. The phonon-mediated option is presented as an enhancement rather than baseline. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity; design study relies on external material properties without self-referential derivations.

full rationale

The manuscript is a theory-guided materials-to-architecture proposal that cites external detector-grade Ge impurity levels (~10^10 cm^-3) and In acceptor densities without performing any internal fits, predictions, or derivations that reduce to those inputs by construction. No equations, self-citations, or uniqueness theorems are invoked in a load-bearing way; the central compatibility claim is presented as an assumption to be validated experimentally rather than derived from prior author work. The analysis of coupling hierarchy, strain limits, and scaling prospects remains self-contained against external benchmarks and does not rename known results or smuggle ansatzes via citation.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 2 axioms · 0 invented entities

The proposal rests on domain assumptions about achievable purity in detector-grade Ge and the compatibility of In-acceptor spacing with qubit operation; no new entities are postulated and no free parameters are fitted to new data.

free parameters (1)
  • target In acceptor density = 2e14 cm^-3
    Chosen as approximately 2x10^14 cm^-3 to produce ~170 nm average spacing for five acceptors in a 1 um channel
axioms (2)
  • domain assumption Residual impurity background near 10^10 cm^-3 is achievable and sufficient to keep bulk electrostatic and strain disorder below qubit thresholds
    Invoked to justify the low-disorder host claim
  • standard math Valence-band spin-orbit coupling in Ge enables all-electrical control of In-acceptor hole spins
    Standard property of the Ge valence band used without derivation

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5879 in / 1535 out tokens · 23059 ms · 2026-06-26T11:53:52.785147+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

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