Spin filtering and entanglement swapping through coherent evolution of a single quantum dot

Phys Rev Lett. 2010 Aug 20;105(8):080502. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.080502. Epub 2010 Aug 17.

Abstract

We exploit the nondissipative dynamics of a pair of electrons in a large square quantum dot to perform singlet-triplet spin measurement through a single charge detection and show how this may be used for entanglement swapping and teleportation. The method is also used to generate the Affleck-Kennedy-Lieb-Tasaki ground state, a further resource for quantum computation. We justify, and derive analytic results for, an effective charge-spin Hamiltonian which is valid over a wide range of parameters and agrees well with exact numerical results of a realistic effective-mass model. Our analysis also indicates that the method is robust to the choice of dot-size and initialization errors, as well as decoherence.