Low disordered, stable, and shallow germanium quantum wells: a playground for spin and hybrid quantum technology

Abstract

Buried-channel semiconductor heterostructures are an archetype material platform to fabricate gated semiconductor quantum devices. Sharp confinement potential is obtained by positioning the channel near the surface, however nearby surface states degrade the electrical properties of the starting material. In this paper we demonstrate a two-dimensional hole gas of high mobility (5× 105 cm2/Vs) in a very shallow strained germanium channel, which is located only 22 nm below the surface. This high mobility leads to mean free paths ≈6 μ m, setting new benchmarks for holes in shallow FET devices. Carriers are confined in an undoped Ge/SiGe heterostructure with reduced background contamination, sharp interfaces, and high uniformity. The top-gate of a dopant-less field effect transistor controls the carrier density in the channel. The high mobility, along with a percolation density of 1.2× 1011 cm-2, light effective mass (0.09 me), and high g-factor (up to 7) highlight the potential of undoped Ge/SiGe as a low-disorder material platform for hybrid quantum technologies.

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