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Superconducting Qubits
Photonic Quantum Computing
Three-Wave Mixing Element with Quantum Paraelectric Materials
arXiv
Authors: Eric I. Rosenthal, Christopher S. Wang, Jamison Sloan, Giovanni Scuri, Yueheng Shi, Kaveh Pezeshki, Peter Mugaba Noertoft, Jelena Vuckovic, Christopher P. Anderson
Year
2025
Paper ID
51038
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
155
Citations
N/A
Abstract
At cryogenic temperatures and microwave frequencies, the perovskite crystals strontium titanate (STO) and potassium tantalate (KTO) have large, tunable permittivity arising from a quantum paraelectric phase. As such, these materials hold promise as a platform to realize compact, variable capacitance elements for use in quantum devices. From modulating this capacitance, we propose the development of a parametric mixing element: a quantum paraelectric nonlinear dielectric amplifier (PANDA). We calculate that a PANDA made from a nanofabricated parallel plate capacitor and realistic design constraints can demonstrate a three-wave mixing strength of order MHz, in comparison to an effective Kerr strength of sub-Hz. This suggests excellent performance as a three-wave mixing element, with high compression power in analogy to superconducting parametric amplifiers based on kinetic inductance. Beyond parametric amplifiers, we predict that compact, tunable capacitors based on STO, KTO, and related materials can enable a wide class of cryogenic quantum circuits including novel filters, switches, circulators, and qubits.
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- This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- At cryogenic temperatures and microwave frequencies, the perovskite crystals strontium titanate (STO) and potassium tantalate (KTO) have large, tunable permittivity arising...
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