Back to Search Start Over

Developing a Chemical and Structural Understanding of the Surface Oxide in a Niobium Superconducting Qubit

Authors :
Murthy, Akshay A.
Das, Paul Masih
Ribet, Stephanie M.
Kopas, Cameron
Lee, Jaeyel
Reagor, Matthew J.
Zhou, Lin
Kramer, Matthew J.
Hersam, Mark C.
Checchin, Mattia
Grassellino, Anna
Reis, Roberto dos
Dravid, Vinayak P.
Romanenko, Alexander
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Superconducting thin films of niobium have been extensively employed in transmon qubit architectures. Although these architectures have demonstrated remarkable improvements in recent years, further improvements in performance through materials engineering will aid in large-scale deployment. Here, we use information retrieved from secondary ion mass spectrometry and electron microscopy to conduct a detailed assessment of the surface oxide that forms in ambient conditions for transmon test qubit devices patterned from a niobium film. We observe that this oxide exhibits a varying stoichiometry with NbO and NbO$_2$ found closer to the niobium film and Nb$_2$O$_5$ found closer to the surface. In terms of structural analysis, we find that the Nb$_2$O$_5$ region is semicrystalline in nature and exhibits randomly oriented grains on the order of 1-2 nm corresponding to monoclinic N-Nb$_2$O$_5$ that are dispersed throughout an amorphous matrix. Using fluctuation electron microscopy, we are able to map the relative crystallinity in the Nb$_2$O$_5$ region with nanometer spatial resolution. Through this correlative method, we observe that amorphous regions are more likely to contain oxygen vacancies and exhibit weaker bonds between the niobium and oxygen atoms. Based on these findings, we expect that oxygen vacancies likely serve as a decoherence mechanism in quantum systems.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2203.08710
Document Type :
Working Paper