Microwave characterization of tantalum superconducting resonators on silicon substrate with niobium buffer layer

  1. Yoshiro Urade,
  2. Kay Yakushiji,
  3. Manabu Tsujimoto,
  4. Takahiro Yamada,
  5. Kazumasa Makise,
  6. Wataru Mizubayashi,
  7. and Kunihiro Inomata
Tantalum thin films sputtered on unheated silicon substrates are characterized with microwaves at around 10 GHz in a 10 mK environment. We show that the phase of tantalum with a body-centered
cubic lattice (α-Ta) can be grown selectively by depositing a niobium buffer layer prior to a tantalum film. The physical properties of the films, such as superconducting transition temperature and crystallinity, change markedly with the addition of the buffer layer. Coplanar waveguide resonators based on the composite film exhibit significantly enhanced internal quality factors compared with a film without the buffer layer. The internal quality factor approaches 2×107 at a large-photon-number limit. While the quality factor decreases at the single-photon level owing to two-level system (TLS) loss, we have identified the primary cause of TLS loss to be the amorphous silicon layer at the film-substrate interface, which originates from the substrate cleaning before the film deposition rather than the film itself. The temperature dependence of the internal quality factors shows a marked rise below 200 mK, suggesting the presence of TLS-TLS interactions. The present low-loss tantalum films can be deposited without substrate heating and thus have various potential applications in superconducting quantum electronics.

Toward Practical-Scale Quantum Annealing Machine for Prime Factoring

  1. Masaaki Maezawa,
  2. Go Fujii,
  3. Mutsuo Hidaka,
  4. Kentaro Imafuku,
  5. Katsuya Kikuchi,
  6. Hanpei Koike,
  7. Kazumasa Makise,
  8. Shuichi Nagasawa,
  9. Hiroshi Nakagawa,
  10. Masahiro Ukibe,
  11. and Shiro Kawabata
We propose a prime factorizer operated in a framework of quantum annealing (QA). The idea is inverse operation of a multiplier implemented with QA-based Boolean logic circuits. We designed
the QA machine on an application-specific-annealing-computing architecture which efficiently increases available hardware budgets at the cost of restricted functionality. The invertible operation of QA logic gates consisting of superconducting flux qubits was confirmed by circuit simulation with classical noise sources. The circuits were implemented and fabricated by using superconducting integrated circuit technologies with Nb/AlOx/Nb Josephson junctions. We also propose a 2.5Dimensional packaging scheme of a qubit-chip/interpose /package-substrate structure for realizing practically large-scale QA systems.