Miniaturizing transmon qubits using van der Waals materials
ORAL
Abstract
Quantum computers can potentially achieve an exponential speedup versus classical computers on certain computational tasks, as recently demonstrated in systems of superconducting qubits. However, these qubits have large footprints due to their large capacitor electrodes needed to suppress losses by avoiding dielectric materials. This tactic hinders scaling by increasing parasitic coupling among circuit components, degrading individual qubit addressability, and limiting the spatial density of qubits. Here, we take advantage of the unique properties of the van der Waals (vdW) materials to reduce the qubit area by a factor of > 1000 while preserving the required capacitance without increasing substantial loss. Our qubits combine conventional aluminum-based Josephson junctions with parallel-plate capacitors composed of crystalline layers of superconducting niobium diselenide (NbSe2) and insulating hexagonal-boron nitride (hBN). We measure a vdW transmon T1 relaxation time of 1.06 µs, which demonstrates a path to achieve high-qubit-density quantum processors with long coherence times, and illustrates the broad utility of layered heterostructures in low-loss, highcoherence quantum devices.
*Most of this work was supported by Army Research Office under Contract Number W911NF-18-C0044. Development of heterostructure assembly techniques at Columbia was supported by the NSF MRSEC program (DMR-2011736). A.A. thanks the supplemental support from QISE-NET under NSF DMR-1747426. K.W. and T.T. acknowledge support from the Elemental Strategy Initiative conducted by the MEXT, Japan (Grant Number JPMXP0112101001) and JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Numbers JP19H05790 and JP20H00354).
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Presenters
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Abhinandan Antony
- Columbia University