Recovery dynamics of a gap-engineered transmon after a quasiparticle burst

  1. Heekun Nho,
  2. Thomas Connolly,
  3. Pavel D. Kurilovich,
  4. Spencer Diamond,
  5. Charlotte G. L. Bøttcher,
  6. Leonid I. Glazman,
  7. and Michel H. Devoret
Ionizing radiation impacts create bursts of quasiparticle density in superconducting qubits. These bursts severely degrade qubit coherence for a prolonged period of time and can be
detrimental for quantum error correction. Here, we experimentally resolve quasiparticle bursts in 3D gap-engineered transmon qubits by continuously monitoring qubit transitions. Gap engineering allowed us to reduce the burst detection rate by a factor of a few. This modest reduction falls several orders of magnitude short of the reduction expected if the quasiparticles quickly thermalize to the cryostat temperature. We associate the limited effect of gap engineering with the slow thermalization of the phonons in our chips after the burst.

Quasiparticle-induced decoherence of a driven superconducting qubit

  1. Mykola Kishmar,
  2. Pavel D. Kurilovich,
  3. Andrey Klots,
  4. Thomas Connolly,
  5. Igor L. Aleiner,
  6. and Vladislav D. Kurilovich
We develop a theory for two quasiparticle-induced decoherence mechanisms of a driven superconducting qubit. In the first mechanism, an existing quasiparticle (QP) tunnels across the
qubit’s Josephson junction while simultaneously absorbing a qubit excitation and one (or several) photons from the drive. In the second mechanism, a qubit transition occurs during the non-linear absorption process converting multiple drive quanta into a pair of new QPs. Both mechanisms can remain significant in gap engineered qubits whose coherence is insensitive to QPs without the drive. Our theory establishes a fundamental limitation on fidelity of the microwave qubit operations, such as readout and gates, stemming from QPs.

High-frequency readout free from transmon multi-excitation resonances

  1. Pavel D. Kurilovich,
  2. Thomas Connolly,
  3. Charlotte G. L. Bøttcher,
  4. Daniel K. Weiss,
  5. Sumeru Hazra,
  6. Vidul R. Joshi,
  7. Andy Z. Ding,
  8. Heekun Nho,
  9. Spencer Diamond,
  10. Vladislav D. Kurilovich,
  11. Wei Dai,
  12. Valla Fatemi,
  13. Luigi Frunzio,
  14. Leonid I. Glazman,
  15. and Michel H. Devoret
Quantum computation will rely on quantum error correction to counteract decoherence. Successfully implementing an error correction protocol requires the fidelity of qubit operations
to be well-above error correction thresholds. In superconducting quantum computers, measurement of the qubit state remains the lowest-fidelity operation. For the transmon, a prototypical superconducting qubit, measurement is carried out by scattering a microwave tone off the qubit. Conventionally, the frequency of this tone is of the same order as the transmon frequency. The measurement fidelity in this approach is limited by multi-excitation resonances in the transmon spectrum which are activated at high readout power. These resonances excite the qubit outside of the computational basis, violating the desired quantum non-demolition character of the measurement. Here, we find that strongly detuning the readout frequency from that of the transmon exponentially suppresses the strength of spurious multi-excitation resonances. By increasing the readout frequency up to twelve times the transmon frequency, we achieve a quantum non-demolition measurement fidelity of 99.93% with a residual probability of leakage to non-computational states of only 0.02%.

Coexistence of nonequilibrium density and equilibrium energy distribution of quasiparticles in a superconducting qubit

  1. Thomas Connolly,
  2. Pavel D. Kurilovich,
  3. Spencer Diamond,
  4. Heekun Nho,
  5. Charlotte G. L. Bøttcher,
  6. Leonid I. Glazman,
  7. Valla Fatemi,
  8. and Michel H. Devoret
The density of quasiparticles typically observed in superconducting qubits exceeds the value expected in equilibrium by many orders of magnitude. Can this out-of-equilibrium quasiparticle
density still possess an energy distribution in equilibrium with the phonon bath? Here, we answer this question affirmatively by measuring the thermal activation of charge-parity switching in a transmon qubit with a difference in superconducting gap on the two sides of the Josephson junction. We then demonstrate how the gap asymmetry of the device can be exploited to manipulate its parity.

Distinguishing parity-switching mechanisms in a superconducting qubit

  1. Spencer Diamond,
  2. Valla Fatemi,
  3. Max Hays,
  4. Heekun Nho,
  5. Pavel D. Kurilovich,
  6. Thomas Connolly,
  7. Vidul R. Joshi,
  8. Kyle Serniak,
  9. Luigi Frunzio,
  10. Leonid I. Glazman,
  11. and Michel H. Devoret
Single-charge tunneling is a decoherence mechanism affecting superconducting qubits, yet the origin of excess quasiparticle excitations (QPs) responsible for this tunneling in superconducting
devices is not fully understood. We measure the flux dependence of charge-parity (or simply, „parity“) switching in an offset-charge-sensitive transmon qubit to identify the contributions of photon-assisted parity switching and QP generation to the overall parity-switching rate. The parity-switching rate exhibits a qubit-state-dependent peak in the flux dependence, indicating a cold distribution of excess QPs which are predominantly trapped in the low-gap film of the device. Moreover, we find that the photon-assisted process contributes significantly to both parity switching and the generation of excess QPs by fitting to a model that self-consistently incorporates photon-assisted parity switching as well as inter-film QP dynamics.