Observation of Interface Piezoelectricity in Superconducting Devices on Silicon

  1. Haoxin Zhou,
  2. Eric Li,
  3. Kadircan Godeneli,
  4. Zi-Huai Zhang,
  5. Shahin Jahanbani,
  6. Kangdi Yu,
  7. Mutasem Odeh,
  8. Shaul Aloni,
  9. Sinéad Griffin,
  10. and Alp Sipahigil
The evolution of superconducting quantum processors is driven by the need to reduce errors and scale for fault-tolerant computation. Reducing physical qubit error rates requires further

Localization and reduction of superconducting quantum coherent circuit losses

  1. M. Virginia P. Altoé,
  2. Archan Banerjee,
  3. Cassidy Berk,
  4. Ahmed Hajr,
  5. Adam Schwartzberg,
  6. Chengyu Song,
  7. Mohammed Al Ghadeer,
  8. Shaul Aloni,
  9. Michael J. Elowson,
  10. John Mark Kreikebaum,
  11. Ed K. Wong,
  12. Sinead Griffin,
  13. Saleem Rao,
  14. Alexander Weber-Bargioni,
  15. Andrew M. Minor,
  16. David I. Santiago,
  17. Stefano Cabrini,
  18. Irfan Siddiqi,
  19. and D. Frank Ogletree
Quantum sensing and computation can be realized with superconducting microwave circuits. Qubits are engineered quantum systems of capacitors and inductors with non-linear Josephson