Characterization of loss mechanisms in a fluxonium qubit

  1. Hantao Sun,
  2. Feng Wu,
  3. Hsiang-Sheng Ku,
  4. Xizheng Ma,
  5. Jin Qin,
  6. Zhijun Song,
  7. Tenghui Wang,
  8. Gengyan Zhang,
  9. Jingwei Zhou,
  10. Yaoyun Shi,
  11. Hui-Hai Zhao,
  12. and Chunqing Deng
Using a fluxonium qubit with in situ tunability of its Josephson energy, we characterize its energy relaxation at different flux biases as well as different Josephson energy values.
The relaxation rate at qubit energy values, ranging more than one order of magnitude around the thermal energy kBT, can be quantitatively explained by a combination of dielectric loss and 1/f flux noise with a crossover point. The amplitude of the 1/f flux noise is consistent with that extracted from the qubit dephasing measurements at the flux sensitive points. In the dielectric loss dominant regime, the loss is consistent with that arises from the electric dipole interaction with two-level-system (TLS) defects. In particular, as increasing Josephson energy thus decreasing qubit frequency at the flux insensitive spot, we find that the qubit exhibits increasingly weaker coupling to TLS defects thus desirable for high-fidelity quantum operations.

Titanium Nitride Film on Sapphire Substrate with Low Dielectric Loss for Superconducting Qubits

  1. Hao Deng,
  2. Zhijun Song,
  3. Ran Gao,
  4. Tian Xia,
  5. Feng Bao,
  6. Xun Jiang,
  7. Hsiang-Sheng Ku,
  8. Zhisheng Li,
  9. Xizheng Ma,
  10. Jin Qin,
  11. Hantao Sun,
  12. Chengchun Tang,
  13. Tenghui Wang,
  14. Feng Wu,
  15. Wenlong Yu,
  16. Gengyan Zhang,
  17. Xiaohang Zhang,
  18. Jingwei Zhou,
  19. Xing Zhu,
  20. Yaoyun Shi,
  21. Hui-Hai Zhao,
  22. and Chunqing Deng
Dielectric loss is one of the major decoherence sources of superconducting qubits. Contemporary high-coherence superconducting qubits are formed by material systems mostly consisting
of superconducting films on substrate with low dielectric loss, where the loss mainly originates from the surfaces and interfaces. Among the multiple candidates for material systems, a combination of titanium nitride (TiN) film and sapphire substrate has good potential because of its chemical stability against oxidization, and high quality at interfaces. In this work, we report a TiN film deposited onto sapphire substrate achieving low dielectric loss at the material interface. Through the systematic characterizations of a series of transmon qubits fabricated with identical batches of TiN base layers, but different geometries of qubit shunting capacitors with various participation ratios of the material interface, we quantitatively extract the loss tangent value at the substrate-metal interface smaller than 8.9×10−4 in 1-nm disordered layer. By optimizing the interface participation ratio of the transmon qubit, we reproducibly achieve qubit lifetimes of up to 300 μs and quality factors approaching 8 million. We demonstrate that TiN film on sapphire substrate is an ideal material system for high-coherence superconducting qubits. Our analyses further suggest that the interface dielectric loss around the Josephson junction part of the circuit could be the dominant limitation of lifetimes for state-of-the-art transmon qubits.

Fluxonium: an alternative qubit platform for high-fidelity operations

  1. Feng Bao,
  2. Hao Deng,
  3. Dawei Ding,
  4. Ran Gao,
  5. Xun Gao,
  6. Cupjin Huang,
  7. Xun Jiang,
  8. Hsiang-Sheng Ku,
  9. Zhisheng Li,
  10. Xizheng Ma,
  11. Xiaotong Ni,
  12. Jin Qin,
  13. Zhijun Song,
  14. Hantao Sun,
  15. Chengchun Tang,
  16. Tenghui Wang,
  17. Feng Wu,
  18. Tian Xia,
  19. Wenlong Yu,
  20. Fang Zhang,
  21. Gengyan Zhang,
  22. Xiaohang Zhang,
  23. Jingwei Zhou,
  24. Xing Zhu,
  25. Yaoyun Shi,
  26. Jianxin Chen,
  27. Hui-Hai Zhao,
  28. and Chunqing Deng
Superconducting qubits provide a promising path toward building large-scale quantum computers. The simple and robust transmon qubit has been the leading platform, achieving multiple
milestones. However, fault-tolerant quantum computing calls for qubit operations at error rates significantly lower than those exhibited in the state of the art. Consequently, alternative superconducting qubits with better error protection have attracted increasing interest. Among them, fluxonium is a particularly promising candidate, featuring large anharmonicity and long coherence times. Here, we engineer a fluxonium-based quantum processor that integrates high qubit-coherence, fast frequency-tunability, and individual-qubit addressability for reset, readout, and gates. With simple and fast gate schemes, we achieve an average single-qubit gate fidelity of 99.97% and a two-qubit gate fidelity of up to 99.72%. This performance is comparable to the highest values reported in the literature of superconducting circuits. Thus our work, for the first time within the realm of superconducting qubits, reveals an approach toward fault-tolerant quantum computing that is alternative and competitive to the transmon system.

Single-shot realization of nonadiabatic holonomic gates with a superconducting Xmon qutrit

  1. Zhenxing Zhang,
  2. P. Z. Zhao,
  3. Tenghui Wang,
  4. Liang Xiang,
  5. Zhilong Jia,
  6. Peng Duan,
  7. D.M. Tong,
  8. Yi Yin,
  9. and Guoping Guo
Nonadiabatic holonomic quantum computation has received increasing attention due to its robustness against control errors as well as high-speed realization. The original protocol of
nonadiabatic holonomic one-qubit gates has been experimentally demonstrated with superconducting transmon qutrit. However, the original protocol requires two noncommuting gates to realize an arbitrary one-qubit gate, which doubles the exposure time of gates to error sources and therefore makes the gates vulnerable to environment-induced decoherence. Single-shot protocol was subsequently proposed to realize an arbitrary one-qubit nonadiabatic holonomic gate. In this paper, we experimentally realize the single-shot protocol of nonadiabatic holonomic single qubit gates with a superconducting Xmon qutrit, where all the Clifford element gates are realized by a single-shot implementation. Characterized by quantum process tomography and randomized benchmarking, the single-shot gates reach a fidelity larger than 99%.

Experimental demonstration of work fluctuations along a shortcut to adiabaticity with a superconducting Xmon qubit

  1. Zhenxing Zhang,
  2. Tenghui Wang,
  3. Liang Xiang,
  4. Zhilong Jia,
  5. Peng Duan,
  6. Weizhou Cai,
  7. Ze Zhan,
  8. Zhiwen Zong,
  9. Jianlan Wu,
  10. Luyan Sun,
  11. Yi Yin,
  12. and Guoping Guo
In a `shortcut-to-adiabaticity‘ (STA) protocol, the counter-diabatic Hamiltonian, which suppresses the non-adiabatic transition of a reference `adiabatic‘ trajectory, induces
a quantum uncertainty of the work cost in the framework of quantum thermodynamics. Following a theory derived recently [Funo et al 2017 Phys. Rev. Lett. 118 100602], we perform an experimental measurement of the STA work statistics in a high-quality superconducting Xmon qubit. Through the frozen-Hamiltonian and frozen-population techniques, we experimentally realize the two-point measurement of the work distribution for given initial eigenstates. Our experimental statistics verify (i) the conservation of the average STA work and (ii) the equality between the STA excess of work fluctuations and the quantum geometric tensor.

Simulating a Topological Transition in a Superconducting Phase Qubit by Fast Adiabatic Trajectories

  1. Tenghui Wang,
  2. Zhenxing Zhang,
  3. Liang Xiang,
  4. Zhihao Gong,
  5. Jianlan Wu,
  6. and Yi Yin
The significance of topological phases has been widely recognized in the community of condensed matter physics. The well controllable quantum systems provide an artificial platform
to probe and engineer various topological phases. The adiabatic trajectory of a quantum state describes the change of the bulk Bloch eigenstates with the momentum, and this adiabatic simulation method is however practically limited due to quantum dissipation. Here we apply the `shortcut to adiabaticity‘ (STA) protocol to realize fast adiabatic evolutions in the system of a superconducting phase qubit. The resulting fast adiabatic trajectories illustrate the change of the bulk Bloch eigenstates in the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) model. A sharp transition is experimentally determined for the topological invariant of a winding number. Our experiment helps identify the topological Chern number of a two-dimensional toy model, suggesting the applicability of the fast adiabatic simulation method for topological systems.

Measuring the Berry Phase in a Superconducting Phase Qubit by a Shortcut to Adiabaticity

  1. Zhenxing Zhang,
  2. Tenghui Wang,
  3. Liang Xiang,
  4. Jiadong Yao,
  5. Jianlan Wu,
  6. and Yi Yin
With a counter-diabatic field supplemented to the reference control field, the `shortcut to adiabaticiy‘ (STA) protocol is implemented in a superconducting phase qubit. The Berry
phase measured in a short time scale is in good agreement with the theoretical result acquired from an adiabatic loop. The trajectory of a qubit vector is extracted, verifying the Berry phase alternatively by the integrated solid angle. The classical noise is introduced to the amplitude or phase of the total control field. In the statistics of the Berry phase, the mean with either noise is almost equal to that without noise, while the variation with the amplitude noise can be described by an analytical expression.