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Systematic Improvements in Transmon Qubit Coherence Enabled by Niobium Surface Encapsulation

Authors :
Bal, Mustafa
Murthy, Akshay A.
Zhu, Shaojiang
Crisa, Francesco
You, Xinyuan
Huang, Ziwen
Roy, Tanay
Lee, Jaeyel
van Zanten, David
Pilipenko, Roman
Nekrashevich, Ivan
Lunin, Andrei
Bafia, Daniel
Krasnikova, Yulia
Kopas, Cameron J.
Lachman, Ella O.
Miller, Duncan
Mutus, Josh Y.
Reagor, Matthew J.
Cansizoglu, Hilal
Marshall, Jayss
Pappas, David P.
Vu, Kim
Yadavalli, Kameshwar
Oh, Jin-Su
Zhou, Lin
Kramer, Matthew J.
Lecocq, Florent Q.
Goronzy, Dominic P.
Torres-Castanedo, Carlos G.
Pritchard, Graham
Dravid, Vinayak P.
Rondinelli, James M.
Bedzyk, Michael J.
Hersam, Mark C.
Zasadzinski, John
Koch, Jens
Sauls, James A.
Romanenko, Alexander
Grassellino, Anna
Source :
npj Quantum Inf 10, 43 (2024)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present a novel transmon qubit fabrication technique that yields systematic improvements in T$_1$ relaxation times. We fabricate devices using an encapsulation strategy that involves passivating the surface of niobium and thereby preventing the formation of its lossy surface oxide. By maintaining the same superconducting metal and only varying the surface structure, this comparative investigation examining different capping materials, such as tantalum, aluminum, titanium nitride, and gold, and film substrates across different qubit foundries definitively demonstrates the detrimental impact that niobium oxides have on the coherence times of superconducting qubits, compared to native oxides of tantalum, aluminum or titanium nitride. Our surface-encapsulated niobium qubit devices exhibit T$_1$ relaxation times 2 to 5 times longer than baseline niobium qubit devices with native niobium oxides. When capping niobium with tantalum, we obtain median qubit lifetimes above 300 microseconds, with maximum values up to 600 microseconds, that represent the highest lifetimes to date for superconducting qubits prepared on both sapphire and silicon. Our comparative structural and chemical analysis suggests why amorphous niobium oxides may induce higher losses compared to other amorphous oxides. These results are in line with high-accuracy measurements of the niobium oxide loss tangent obtained with ultra-high Q superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavities. This new surface encapsulation strategy enables even further reduction of dielectric losses via passivation with ambient-stable materials, while preserving fabrication and scalable manufacturability thanks to the compatibility with silicon processes.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
npj Quantum Inf 10, 43 (2024)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2304.13257
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-024-00840-x