Heterogeneous integration of high kinetic inductance resonator with thin-film lithium niobate nanomechanical resonators
ORAL
Abstract
Entering the strong coupling regime is an important step towards the quantum control of a system. In this work, we demonstrate coupling GHz nanomechanical resonators to frequency-tunable superconducting microwave resonators via cross-chip wire bond and flip-chip bump bond methods. By implementing galvanic contacts, which minimize parasitic capacitance and inductance, and tuning the microwave resonators with an external magnetic field, we observe a series of anti-crossings with the mechanical modes and report strong coupling strengths larger than 10 MHz at dilution fridge temperatures. The demonstrated multiple-chip architecture provides flexibility, simplified fabrication, and could potentially enable coupling between a vast variety of quantum systems such as spins with different host materials. Our work represents an important step towards a plug-and-play architecture for hybrid quantum systems.
*This work was funded by the David and Lucille Packard Fellowship, Amazon Web Services Inc., the Stanford University Terman Fellowship, the U.S. government through the Office of Naval Research (ONR) under grant No. N00014-20-1-2422, and the National Science Foundation CAREER award No. ECCS-1941826, the U.S. Department of Energy through Grant No. DE-SC0019174. E.A.W. was supported by the Department of Defense through the National Defense & Engineering Graduate Fellowship. A.Y.C. was supported by QuaCGR fellowship through the ARO. Part of this work was performed at the Stanford Nano Shared Facilities (SNSF), supported by the National Science Foundation under award ECCS-2026822.
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Presenters
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Sultan Malik
- Stanford University