Laser-Annealing-Assisted Josephson Junction Resistance Tuning
ORAL
Abstract
As superconducting quantum devices increase in complexity, the Josephson junction critical current needs to be fabricated to higher precision. However, current fabrication processes often exhibit large dispersion between junctions, and can lead to frequency collisions amongst qubits in fixed-frequency transmon quantum processors. One effective post-fabrication technique for adjusting the frequency of transmons is laser annealing, which can reduce junction variability down to 0.15%, thereby increasing the number of working qubits in a quantum processor. We present a laser annealer for Josephson junctions based on conventional microscopy components. With this tool, we conduct a thorough study of the annealing parameters and demonstrate that we can tune our junctions up to 6%, which provides sufficient dynamic range to fine-tune our native 3% wafer-scale fabrication variations. We demonstrate that annealing is stable against temporal drifts (aging) and that annealing does not impact the material quality of our junctions. Finally, we investigate the coherence stability of transmons before and after annealing. We present two-level system (TLS) spectroscopy to observe how laser annealing affects the environment of these qubits.
*This work was supported by the Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Testbeds for Science program, Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
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Presenters
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Hyunseong Kim
- University of California, Berkeley