Intermodulation Distortion in a Josephson Traveling Wave Parametric Amplifier
ORAL
Abstract
Josephson traveling wave parametric amplifiers enable the amplification of weak microwave signals close to the quantum limit with large bandwidth, which has a broad range of applications in superconducting quantum computing and in the operation of single-photon detectors. While the large bandwidth allows for their use in frequency-multiplexed detection architectures, an increased number of readout tones per amplifier puts more stringent requirements on the dynamic range to avoid saturation. Here, we characterize the undesired mixing processes between the different frequency-multiplexed tones applied to a Josephson traveling wave parametric amplifier, a phenomenon also known as intermodulation distortion. The effect becomes particularly significant when the amplifier is operated close to its saturation power. Furthermore, we demonstrate that intermodulation distortion can lead to significant crosstalk and reduction of fidelity for multiplexed readout of superconducting qubits. We suggest using large detunings between the pump and signal frequencies to mitigate crosstalk. Our work provides insights into the limitations of current Josephson traveling wave parametric amplifiers and highlights the importance of performing further research on these devices.
*The authors acknowledge financial support by ODNI, IARPA, via the US ARO grant W911NF-16-1-0071, by SNFS NCCR QSIT, by the EU Flagship H2020-FETFLAG-2018-03 project 820363 OpenSuperQ, by the SNFS R'Equip grant 206021-170731, by the EU programme H2020-FETOPEN project 828826 Quromorphic, by ETH Zurich, and by Fondation Jean-Jacques & Felicia Lopez-Loreta.
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Publication: A. Remm et al, arXiv:2210.04799 (2022)
Presenters
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Ants Remm
- ETH Zurich