Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.138, No.4, 1344-1348, 2016
Employing Forbidden Transitions as Qubits in a Nuclear Spin-Free Chromium Complex
The implementation of quantum computation. (QC) would revolutionize scientific fields ranging from encryption to quantum simulation. One intuitive candidate for the smallest unit of a quantum computer, a qubit, is electronic spin. A prominent proposal for QC relies on high spin magnetic molecules, where multiple transitions between the many M-S levels are employed as qubits. Yet, over a decade after the original notion, the exploitation of multiple transitions within a single manifold for QC remains unrealized in these high-spin species due to the challenge of accessing forbidden transitions. To create a proof-of-concept system, we synthesized the novel nuclear spin-free complex ECr(C3S5)(3-) with precisely tuned zero-field splitting parameters that create two spectroscopically addressable transitions, with one being a forbidden transition. Pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements enabled the investigation of the coherent lifetimes (T-2) and quantum control (Rabi oscillations) for two transitions, one allowed and one forbidden, within the S = 3/2 spin manifold. This investigation represents a step forward in the development of high-spin species as a pathway to scalable QC systems within magnetic molecules.