Carbon nanotubes coupled to superconducting impedance matching circuits

ORAL

Abstract

Coupling carbon nanotube devices to microwave circuits offers a significant increase in bandwidth and signal-to-noise ratio. These facilitate fast non-invasive readouts important for quantum optics, shot noise and correlation measurements. Here, we successfully couple a carbon nanotube (CNT) double quantum dot to a GHz superconducting matching circuit using a mechanical transfer technique. The device shows a tunable bipolar double dot behavior, reaching the few-electron/hole regime. The resonance response reflected by the matching circuit is a sensitive probe of the charge state of the device, allowing a determination of the absolute charge number. The resonance response at the interdot charge transitions enables quantitative parameter extraction. Presented results open the path for novel studies of microwave photons interacting with electrons in carbon nanotubes.

*Research at Basel is supported by the NCCR-Nano, NCCR-QIST, ERC project QUEST, and FP7 project SE2ND.

Authors

  • Schonenberger Christian

    • Departement of Physics, Univ. of Basel
  • Minkyung Jung

    • Departement of Physics, Univ. of Basel
  • Vishal Ranjan

    • Departement of Physics, Univ. of Basel
  • Gabriel Puebla-Hellmann

    • Department of Physics, ETH-Zurich
  • Thomas Hasler

    • Departement of Physics, Univ. of Basel
  • Andreas Nunnenkamp

    • Departement of Physics, Univ. of Basel
  • Matthias Muoth

    • Micro- and Nanosystems, ETH-Zurich
  • Christofer Hierold

    • Micro- and Nanosystems, ETH-Zurich
  • Andreas Wallraff

    • Department of Physics, ETH-Zurich