Physics Theses and Dissertations
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/2800
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Item RELAXATION TIME FLUCTUATIONS IN TRANSMONS WITH DIFFERENT SUPERCONDUCTING GAPS(2023) Li, Kungang; Lobb, Christopher; Chemical Physics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)In this thesis, I discuss the fabrication and measurement of Al/AlOx/Al transmons that have electrodes with different superconducting gaps. With gap-engineering, the tunneling of single quasiparticle from the low-gap side to the high-gap side can be suppressed, hence increasing the relaxation time T1. The best gap-engineered device showed T1 exceeding 300 μs. Large T1 fluctuations in my devices were also observed. I proposed a mechanism for exploring the T1 fluctuation data and discuss the possible underlying cause of the T1 fluctuations. I first discuss the theory of the loss in gap-engineered transmons, with a focus on the loss from non-equilibrium quasiparticles. The model yields the quasiparticle-induced loss in transmons and its dependence on temperature. I also discuss how multiple Andreev reflection (MAR) effects might alter these conclusions, leading to a further reduction in T1. I then describe the design, fabrication and basic characterization of the transmon chip SKD102, which features two transmons – one with thin-film electrodes of pure Al and another that had one electrode made from oxygen-doped Al. I next examined T1 vs temperature and how the T1 fluctuations depended on temperature. I compare my results to a simple model and find reasonable agreement in transmons on chip SKD102, KL103 and KL109, which had different electrode and layer configurations. Finally, I analyze T1 fluctuations in different devices and as a function of temperature and propose a model to explain this behavior. Over the different devices, the T1 fluctuation magnitude roughly scaled as T13/2. With increasing temperature, T1 decreases due to a higher density of thermally generated quasiparticles. In contrast, for an individual device measured from 20mK to 250 mK, the fluctuation magnitude appears to be proportional to T1. I present a model of quasiparticle dissipation channels that reproduces both of these observed scaling relationships.Item LOSS IN SUPERCONDUCTING QUANTUM DEVICES FROM NON-EQUILIBRIUM QUASIPARTICLES AND INHOMOGENEITY IN ENERGY GAP(2020) Zhang, Rui; Wellstood, Frederick C.; Palmer, Benjamin S.; Physics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)This dissertation describes energy dissipation and microwave loss due to non-equilibrium quasiparticles in superconducting transmon qubits and titanium nitride coplanar waveguide resonators. During the measurements of transmon T1 relaxation time and resonator quality factor QI, I observed reduced microwave loss as the temperature increased from 20 mK to approximately Tc/10 at which the loss takes on a minimum value. I argue that this effect is due to non-equilibrium quasiparticles. I measured the temperature dependence of the relaxation time T1 of the excited state of an Al/AlOx/Al transmon and found that, in some cases, T1 increased by almost a factor of two as the temperature increased from 30 mK to 100 mK with a best T1 of 0.2 ms. I present an argument showing this unexpected temperature dependence occurs due to the behavior of non-equilibrium quasiparticles in devices in which one electrode in the tunnel junction has a smaller volume, and slightly smaller superconducting energy gap, than the other electrode. At sufficiently low temperatures, non-equilibrium quasiparticles accumulate in the electrode with the smaller gap, leading to a relatively high density of quasiparticles at the junction and a short T1. Increasing the temperature gives the quasiparticles enough thermal energy to occupy the higher gap electrode, reducing the density at the junction and increasing T1. I present a model of this effect, extract the density of quasiparticles and the two superconducting energy gaps, and discuss implications for increasing the relaxation time of transmons. I also observed a similar phenomenon in low temperature microwave studies of titanium nitride coplanar waveguide resonators. I report on loss in a resonator at temperatures from 20 mK up to 1.1 K and with the application of infrared pair breaking radiation (λ=1.55 μm). With no applied IR light, the internal quality factor increased from QI = 800,000 at T < 70 mK up to QI=(2×10^6 ) at 600 mK. The resonant frequency f0 increased by 2 parts per million over the same temperature range. Above 600 mK both QI and f0 decreased rapidly, consistent with the increase in the density of thermally generated quasiparticles. With the application of IR light and for intensities below 1 aW μm^(-2) and T < 400 mK, QI increased in a similar way to increasing the temperature before beginning to decrease with larger intensities. I show that a model involving non-equilibrium quasiparticles and two regions of different superconducting gaps can explain this unexpected behavior.Item Variable Qubit-Qubit Coupling Via a Tunable LC Resonator(2018) Ballard, Cody James; Wellstood, Frederick C.; Lobb, Christopher J.; Physics; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)This dissertation examines the design, fabrication, and characterization of a superconducting lumped-element tunable LC resonator that is used to vary the coupling between two superconducting qubits. Some level of qubit-qubit coupling is needed to perform gating operations. However, with fixed coupling, single qubit operations become considerably more difficult due to dispersive shifts in their energy levels transitions that depend on the state of the other qubit. Ideally, one wants a system in which the qubit-qubit coupling can be turned off to allow for single qubit operations, and then turned back on to allow for multi-qubit gate operations. I present results on a device that has two fixed-frequency transmon qubits capacitively coupled to a tunable thin-film LC resonator. The resonator can be tuned in situ over a range of 4.14 GHz to 4.94 GHz by applying an external magnetic flux to two single-Josephson junction loops, which are incorporated into the resonator’s inductance. The qubits have 0-to-1 transition frequencies of 5.10 GHz and 4.74 GHz. To isolate the system and provide a means for reading out the state of the qubit readout, the device was mounted in a 3D Al microwave cavity with a TE101 mode resonance frequency of about 6.1 GHz. The flux-dependent transition frequencies of the system were measured and fit to results from a coupled Hamiltonian model. With the LC resonator tuned to its minimum resonance frequency, I observed a qubit-qubit dispersive shift of 2χ_qq≈ 0.1 MHz, which was less than the linewidth of the qubit transitions. This dispersive shift was sufficiently small to consider the coupling “off”, allowing single qubit operations. The qubit-qubit dispersive shift varied with the applied flux up to a maximum dispersive shift of 2χ_qq≈ 6 MHz. As a proof-of-principle, I present preliminary results on performing a CNOT gate operation on the qubits when the coupling was “on” with 2χ_qq≈ 4 MHz. This dissertation also includes observations of the temperature dependence of the relaxation time T1 of three Al/AlOx/Al transmons. We found that, in some cases, T1 increased by almost a factor of two as the temperature increased from 30 mK to 100 mK. We found that this anomalous behavior was consistent with loss due to non-equilibrium quasiparticles in a transmon where one electrode in the tunnel junction had a smaller volume and slightly smaller superconducting energy gap than the other electrode. At sufficiently low temperatures, non-equilibrium quasiparticles accumulate in the electrode with a smaller gap, leading to an increased density of quasiparticles at the junction and a corresponding decrease in the relaxation time. I present a model of this effect, use the model to extract the density of non-equilibrium quasiparticles in the device, and find the values of the two superconducting energy gaps.