Error budget of parametric resonance entangling gate with a tunable coupler

  1. Eyob A. Sete,
  2. Vinay Tripathi,
  3. Joseph A. Valery,
  4. Daniel Lidar,
  5. and Josh Y. Mutus
We analyze the experimental error budget of parametric resonance gates in a tunable coupler architecture. We identify and characterize various sources of errors, including incoherent,
leakage, amplitude, and phase errors. By varying the two-qubit gate time, we explore the dynamics of these errors and their impact on the gate fidelity. To accurately capture the impact of incoherent errors on gate fidelity, we measure the coherence times of qubits under gate operating conditions. Our findings reveal that the incoherent errors, mainly arising from qubit relaxation and dephasing due to white noise, limit the fidelity of the two-qubit gates. Moreover, we demonstrate that leakage to noncomputational states is the second largest contributor to the two-qubit gates infidelity, as characterized using leakage-randomized benchmarking. The error budgeting methodology we developed here can be effectively applied to other types of gate implementations.

Systematic Improvements in Transmon Qubit Coherence Enabled by Niobium Surface Encapsulation

  1. Mustafa Bal,
  2. Akshay A. Murthy,
  3. Shaojiang Zhu,
  4. Francesco Crisa,
  5. Xinyuan You,
  6. Ziwen Huang,
  7. Tanay Roy,
  8. Jaeyel Lee,
  9. David van Zanten,
  10. Roman Pilipenko,
  11. Ivan Nekrashevich,
  12. Daniel Bafia,
  13. Yulia Krasnikova,
  14. Cameron J. Kopas,
  15. Ella O. Lachman,
  16. Duncan Miller,
  17. Josh Y. Mutus,
  18. Matthew J. Reagor,
  19. Hilal Cansizoglu,
  20. Jayss Marshall,
  21. David P. Pappas,
  22. Kim Vu,
  23. Kameshwar Yadavalli,
  24. Jin-Su Oh,
  25. Lin Zhou,
  26. Matthew J. Kramer,
  27. Dominic P. Goronzy,
  28. Carlos G. Torres-Castanedo,
  29. Graham Pritchard,
  30. Vinayak P. Dravid,
  31. James M. Rondinelli,
  32. Michael J. Bedzyk,
  33. Mark C. Hersam,
  34. John Zasadzinski,
  35. Jens Koch,
  36. James A. Sauls,
  37. Alexander Romanenko,
  38. and Anna Grassellino
We present a novel transmon qubit fabrication technique that yields systematic improvements in T1 coherence times. We fabricate devices using an encapsulation strategy that involves
passivating the surface of niobium and thereby preventing the formation of its lossy surface oxide. By maintaining the same superconducting metal and only varying the surface structure, this comparative investigation examining different capping materials and film substrates across different qubit foundries definitively demonstrates the detrimental impact that niobium oxides have on the coherence times of superconducting qubits, compared to native oxides of tantalum, aluminum or titanium nitride. Our surface-encapsulated niobium qubit devices exhibit T1 coherence times 2 to 5 times longer than baseline niobium qubit devices with native niobium oxides. When capping niobium with tantalum, we obtain median qubit lifetimes above 200 microseconds. Our comparative structural and chemical analysis suggests that amorphous niobium suboxides may induce higher losses. These results are in line with high-accuracy measurements of the niobium oxide loss tangent obtained with ultra-high Q superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavities. This new surface encapsulation strategy enables further reduction of dielectric losses via passivation with ambient-stable materials, while preserving fabrication and scalable manufacturability thanks to the compatibility with silicon processes.

Quasiparticle spectroscopy, transport, and magnetic properties of Nb films used in superconducting transmon qubits

  1. Kamal R. Joshi,
  2. Sunil Ghimire,
  3. Makariy A. Tanatar,
  4. Amlan Datta,
  5. Jin-Su Oh,
  6. Lin Zhou,
  7. Cameron J. Kopas,
  8. Jayss Marshall,
  9. Josh Y. Mutus,
  10. Julie Slaughter,
  11. Matthew J. Kramer,
  12. James A. Sauls,
  13. and Ruslan Prozorov
Niobium thin films on silicon substrate used in the fabrication of superconducting qubits have been characterized using scanning and transmission electron microscopy, electrical transport,
magnetization, quasiparticle spectroscopy, and real-space real-time magneto-optical imaging. We study niobium films to provide an example of a comprehensive analytical set that may benefit superconducting circuits such as those used in quantum computers. The films show outstanding superconducting transition temperature of Tc=9.35 K and a fairly clean superconducting gap, along with superfluid density enhanced at intermediate temperatures. These observations are consistent with the recent theory of anisotropic strong-coupling superconductivity in Nb. However, the response to the magnetic field is complicated, exhibiting significantly irreversible behavior and insufficient heat conductance leading to thermo-magnetic instabilities. These may present an issue for further improvement of transmon quantum coherence. Possible mitigation strategies are discussed.

Simple coplanar waveguide resonator mask targeting metal-substrate interface

  1. Cameron J. Kopas,
  2. Ella Lachman,
  3. Corey Rae H McRae,
  4. Yuvraj Mohan,
  5. Josh Y. Mutus,
  6. Ani Nersisyan,
  7. and Amrit Poudel
This white paper presents a single-layer mask, found at this https URL. It is designed for fabrication of superconducting microwave resonators towards 1:1 comparisons of dielectric
losses from the metal-substrate interface. Finite-element electromagnetic simulations are used to determine participation ratios of the four major regions of the on-chip devices, as well as to confirm lack of crosstalk between neighboring devices and demonstrate coupling tunability over three orders of magnitude. This mask is intended as an open-source community resource for facilitating precise and accurate comparisons of materials in the single-photon, millikelvin regime.