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Superconducting Qubits
Localization and reduction of superconducting quantum coherent circuit losses
arXiv
Authors: M. Virginia P. Altoé, Archan Banerjee, Cassidy Berk, Ahmed Hajr, Adam Schwartzberg, Chengyu Song, Mohammed Al Ghadeer, Shaul Aloni, Michael J. Elowson, John Mark Kreikebaum, Ed K. Wong, Sinead Griffin, Saleem Rao, Alexander Weber-Bargioni, Andrew M. Minor, David I. Santiago, Stefano Cabrini, Irfan Siddiqi, D. Frank Ogletree
Year
2020
Paper ID
18441
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
166
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Quantum sensing and computation can be realized with superconducting microwave circuits. Qubits are engineered quantum systems of capacitors and inductors with non-linear Josephson junctions. They operate in the single-excitation quantum regime, photons of 27 μeV at 6.5 GHz. Quantum coherence is fundamentally limited by materials defects, in particular atomic-scale parasitic two-level systems (TLS) in amorphous dielectrics at circuit interfaces.[1] The electric fields driving oscillating charges in quantum circuits resonantly couple to TLS, producing phase noise and dissipation. We use coplanar niobium-on-silicon superconducting resonators to probe decoherence in quantum circuits. By selectively modifying interface dielectrics, we show that most TLS losses come from the silicon surface oxide, and most non-TLS losses are distributed throughout the niobium surface oxide. Through post-fabrication interface modification we reduced TLS losses by 85% and non-TLS losses by 72%, obtaining record single-photon resonator quality factors above 5 million and approaching a regime where non-TLS losses are dominant. [1]Müller, C., Cole, J. H. & Lisenfeld, J. Towards understanding two-level-systems in amorphous solids: insights from quantum circuits. Rep. Prog. Phys. 82, 124501 (2019)
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2020 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Quantum sensing and computation can be realized with superconducting microwave circuits.
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