Elimination of Flux Trapping in Superconducting Circuits in Ambient Magnetic Fields

  1. Rohan T. Kapur,
  2. Alex Wynn,
  3. Sergey K. Tolpygo,
  4. Neel Parmar,
  5. Anil Mankame,
  6. Adam A. Libson,
  7. Rabindra Das,
  8. Michele Kelley,
  9. Pauli Kehayias,
  10. Nathaniel J. O'Connor,
  11. Collin N. Muniz,
  12. Justin L. Mallek,
  13. and Jennifer M. Schloss
Superconductor digital electronics and quantum computing with superconducting qubits are promising next-generation computing technologies. When cooled down or operated in the presence
of a nonzero background magnetic field Br, superconducting thin films comprising the circuits can trap magnetic vortices that can degrade circuit or qubit performance. In this work, we report a practical solution for eliminating flux trapped during cooldown in ambient magnetic fields, Br≤60 $\upmu$T, based on controlled local thermal gradients and moats, etched holes in the superconducting films of the circuit. Thermal gradients created by integrated on-chip resistive heaters move vortices towards the moats, where they become trapped away from circuitry regions and pinning sites. Using magnetic imaging and electrical circuit readout, we demonstrate that this approach is capable of removing magnetic flux trapped during field cooling and magnetic flux nucleated by circuit operation. If used in an environment with basic magnetic shielding, this solution is capable of suppressing all magnetic flux in a large-scale circuit, overcoming one of the long-standing challenges preventing high-performance scalable computing using superconductors.