Readout of a Transmon Qubit using an All-Pass Readout Resonator with Interference Purcell Suppression
ORAL
Abstract
Impedance mismatch in the readout bus is a leading cause of high variance in measurement rate κ in superconducting quantum processors. Moreover, the addition of bulky and high-magnetic field circulators and isolators is often needed for impedance matching. In this work, we demonstrate transmission-based readout of a transmon qubit using a directional readout resonator. Whereas a typical readout resonator would have a sharp dip in |S21| on resonance, our directional resonator demonstrates a dip of less than 1dB on resonance, thus closely preserving the 50-ohm readout bus. This both maximizes measurement efficiency and avoids needing a weakly-coupled port, a major source of impedance mismatch in many standard qubit readout schemes. To enable fast readout and reset, we propose a novel interference Purcell filter compatible with directional readout and demonstrate Purcell suppression by 2 orders of magnitude over a bandwidth of more than 600 MHz. This architecture is expected to facilitate more scalable and modular design of quantum processors.
*This research was funded in part by an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship and the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab. This material is based upon work supported under Air Force Contract No. FA8702-15-D-0001. Any opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Air Force.
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Presenters
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Alec Yen
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT