Chip Mount Design as a Dissipation-Limiting Factor in High Quality Superconducting Resonators

ORAL

Abstract

Superconducting quantum computing technology continues to make progress with regards to both materials quality and circuit complexity. We have found that chip mount design can become a coherence-limiting factor for superconducting coplanar resonators with an internal quality factor above 1 million. Understanding the impact of chip-to-mount coupling will aid in both proper mount design for higher density circuits as well as the further improvement of coherence times. These coplanar resonators provide an ideal test circuit as they are sensitive to a variety of loss mechanisms including radiation, infrared light, and magnetic fields which also affect more complex superconducting circuits. I will present results relating the coherence and performance of resonators to box design, box material, and chip layout.

Authors

  • Brooks Campbell

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • R. Barends

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Joerg Bochmann

    • UC Santa Barbara
    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • Yu Chen

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC - Santa Barbara
  • Zijun Chen

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • B. Chiaro

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Andrew Dunsworth

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • I.-C. Hoi

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • Department of Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden
  • Evan Jeffrey

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • J. Kelly

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Anthony Megrant

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Josh Mutus

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • C. Neil

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • Peter O'Malley

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • C. Quintana

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • Pedram Roushan

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Daniel Sank

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
  • Amit Vainsencher

    • UC Santa Barbara
    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • Jim Wenner

    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Ted White

    • U.C. Santa Barbara
    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • Ted White

    • U.C. Santa Barbara
    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
  • John Martinis

    • University of California, Santa Barbara
    • Univ of California - Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara
    • UC Santa Barbara, USA
    • Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA