Bifluxon: Fluxon-Parity-Protected Superconducting Qubit

  1. Konstantin Kalashnikov,
  2. Wen Ting Hsieh,
  3. Wenyuan Zhang,
  4. Wen-Sen Lu,
  5. Plamen Kamenov,
  6. Agustin Di Paolo,
  7. Alexandre Blais,
  8. Michael E. Gershenson,
  9. and Matthew Bell
We have developed and characterized a symmetry-protected superconducting qubit that offers simultaneous exponential suppression of energy decay from charge and flux noise, and dephasing
from flux noise. The qubit consists of a Cooper-pair box (CPB) shunted by a superinductor, thus forming a superconducting loop. Provided the offset charge on the CPB island is an odd number of electrons, the qubit potential corresponds to that of a cosϕ/2 Josephson element, preserving the parity of fluxons in the loop via Aharonov-Casher interference. In this regime, the logical-state wavefunctions reside in disjoint regions of phase space, thereby ensuring the protection against energy decay. By switching the protection on, we observed a ten-fold increase of the decay time, reaching up to 100μs. Though the qubit is sensitive to charge noise, the sensitivity is much reduced in comparison with the charge qubit, and the charge-noise-induced dephasing time of the current device exceeds 1μs. Implementation of the full dephasing protection can be achieved in the next-generation devices by combining several cosϕ/2 Josephson elements in a small array.

Microresonators fabricated from high-kinetic-inductance Aluminum films

  1. Wenyuan Zhang,
  2. K. Kalashnikov,
  3. Wen-Sen Lu,
  4. P. Kamenov,
  5. T. DiNapoli,
  6. and M.E. Gershenson
We have studied superconducting coplanar-waveguide (CPW) resonators fabricated from disordered (granular) films of Aluminum. Very high kinetic inductance of these films, inherent to
disordered materials, allows us to implement ultra-short (200 μm at a 5GHz resonance frequency) and high-impedance (up to 5 kΩ) half-wavelength resonators. We have shown that the intrinsic losses in these resonators at temperatures ≲250mK are limited by resonator coupling to two-level systems in the environment. The demonstrated internal quality factors are comparable with those for CPW resonators made of conventional superconductors. High kinetic inductance and well-understood losses make these disordered Aluminum resonators promising for a wide range of microwave applications which include kinetic inductance photon detectors and superconducting quantum circuits.