New material platform for superconducting transmon qubits with coherence times exceeding 0.3 milliseconds

ORAL

Abstract

We employ tantalum transmon qubits with coherence times above 0.3 ms to demonstrate the importance of materials engineering in realizing a superconducting quantum processor. In this talk we characterize the regions and mechanisms of loss in state-of-the-art two-dimensional qubits. To do so, we efficiently iterate our fabrication procedure using materials spectroscopy. We correlate the spectroscopic results with time domain measurements to enable rapid screening of new materials and processing techniques. We further elucidate the dominant loss sources by characterizing time, frequency, geometry, and temperature fluctuations of coherence. Our fabrication techniques can be easily employed in standard industry and academic cleanrooms, and integrated into existing quantum processor architectures.

*Army Research Office Grant W911NF1910016, National Science Foundation MRSEC Grant DMR-1420541, National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship

Presenters

  • Alexander Place

    • Princeton University

Authors

  • Alexander Place

    • Princeton University
  • Lila Rodgers

    • Princeton University
  • Aveek Dutta

    • Princeton University
    • School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University
  • Pranav Mundada

    • Princeton University
    • Q-CTRL
    • Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
  • Basil Smitham

    • Princeton University
  • Mattias V Fitzpatrick

    • Princeton University
  • Zhaoqi Leng

    • Princeton University
  • Anjali Premkumar

    • Princeton University
  • Jacob Elvin Bryon

    • Princeton University
  • Sara Sussman

    • Princeton University
  • Guangming Cheng

    • Princeton University
  • Trisha N Madhavan

    • Princeton University
  • Harshvardhan Babla

    • Princeton University
  • Berthold Jaeck

    • Princeton University
    • Physics, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
  • Andras Gyenis

    • Princeton University
    • Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University
  • Nan Yao

    • Princeton University
  • Robert Cava

    • Princeton University
    • Department of Chemistry, Princeton University
  • Nathalie De Leon

    • Princeton University
  • Andrew Houck

    • Princeton University
    • Department of Electrical Engineering, Princeton University