The gatemon: a transmon with a voltage-variable superconductor-semiconductor junction

COFFEE_KLATCH  · Invited

Abstract

We have developed a superconducting transmon qubit with a semiconductor-based Josephson junction element.\footnote{T.W. Larsen \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{115}, 127001 (2015).}$^{,}$\footnote{G. de Lange \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{115}, 127002 (2015),} The junction is made from an InAs nanowire with \textit{in situ} molecular beam epitaxy-grown superconducting Al contacts. This gate-controlled transmon, or gatemon, allows simple tuning of the qubit transition frequency using a gate voltage to vary the density of carriers in the semiconductor region. In the first generations of devices we have measured coherence times up to $\sim$10 $\mu$s. These coherence times, combined with stable qubit operation, permit single qubit rotations with fidelities of $\sim$99.5~\% for all gates including voltage-controlled $Z$~rotations. Towards multi-qubit operation we have also implemented a two qubit voltage-controlled cPhase gate. In contrast to flux-tuned transmons, voltage-tunable gatemons may simplify the task of scaling to multi-qubit circuits and enable new means of control for many qubit architectures.

*In collaboration with T.W. Larsen, L. Casparis, M.S. Olsen, F. Kuemmeth, T.S. Jespersen, P. Krogstrup, J. Nygard and C.M. Marcus. Research was supported by Microsoft Project Q, Danish National Research Foundation and a Marie Curie Fellowship.

Authors

  • Karl Petersson

    • Center for Quantum Devices and Station Q Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark