A reproducible design for multi-mode high-Q superconducting quantum electromechanics
ORAL
Abstract
Superconducting electromechanical systems have been among the most successful platforms to study mechanical motion in the quantum regime. These systems are implemented by LC superconducting resonators with a mechanically-compliant capacitor. However, these systems suffer from the low reproducibility of the nanofabrication process, severely limiting their scalability. This restricts the realization of multi-mode electromechanical systems and limits the achievable mechanical quality factors, which largely determine the thermal coherence time.
Here we introduce a reproducible design using a novel nanofabrication process to make a flat high-stress aluminum trampoline resonator. We demonstrate full control of the system's mechanical and microwave properties by making a flat drumhead capacitor. We achieve mechanical quality factors up to 4 million, allowing for similarly longer thermal coherence times.
We believe the new design will open a window to study multi-mode phenomena such as collective behavior and topological physics in optomechanical arrays.
Here we introduce a reproducible design using a novel nanofabrication process to make a flat high-stress aluminum trampoline resonator. We demonstrate full control of the system's mechanical and microwave properties by making a flat drumhead capacitor. We achieve mechanical quality factors up to 4 million, allowing for similarly longer thermal coherence times.
We believe the new design will open a window to study multi-mode phenomena such as collective behavior and topological physics in optomechanical arrays.
*This work was supported by the SNSF under grant agmt No. NCCR-QSIT: 51NF40_185902, the European Research Council (ERC) under the EU H2020 research and innovation programme, grant agmt No. 835329 (ExCOM-cCEO).
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Presenters
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Amir Youssefi
- Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne