Using magnetically-resilient circuit QED techniques to study 2D materials
ORAL
Abstract
Combining superconducting circuits with materials hosting exotic quantum properties to create hybrid circuits allows us to utilize circuit QED techniques to measure such materials. This new platform requires development of superconducting resonators that can sustain a high quality factor even in presence of an applied magnetic field, often required to access novel quantum effects in such materials. We present results on superconducting resonators made of thin titanium nitride, studied in an in-plane magnetic field. By implementing a lattice of penetration holes with sizes comparable to the superconducting penetration length, we observe the resonators remain resilient to small out-of-plane magnetic fields. The resonators are then combined with novel 2D materials to serve as a sensitive quantum-coherent probe of condensed-matter properties.
*This research was funded in part by the HRL Matisse program; and by the Department of Defense via MIT Lincoln Laboratory under Air Force Contract No. FA8721-05-C-0002. The views and conclusions contained herein are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies or endorsements, either expressed or implied, of the U.S. Government.
–
Presenters
Charlotte Boettcher
Physics, Harvard University
Department of Physics, Harvard University
Dept. of Physics, Harvard University, USA
Authors
Charlotte Boettcher
Physics, Harvard University
Department of Physics, Harvard University
Dept. of Physics, Harvard University, USA
Uri Vool
Harvard University
Physics, Harvard University, John Harvard Distinguished Science Fellowship, Harvard University
Yinyu Liu
Physics, Harvard University
Joel Wang
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Greg Calusine
MIT Lincoln Lab
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
David K Kim
MIT Lincoln Lab
Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory
Lincoln Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Danna Rosenberg
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jonilyn L Yoder
MIT Lincoln Lab
Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln Laboratory
Lincoln Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
MIT Lincoln Laboratory, 244 Wood Street, Lexington, MA 02421
MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Amir Yacoby
Harvard University
Harvard Univ
Physics, Harvard University
Department of Physics, Harvard University & School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University
William D Oliver
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Physics, Research Laboratory of Electronics, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MIT Lincoln Lab
MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Physics, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Dept. of Physics, Research Laboratory of Electronics, and Lincoln Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Research Laboratory of Electronics, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, 244 Wood Street, Lexington, MA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Department of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Physics, Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Physics, MIT; Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT; MIT Lincoln Laboratory