TiN superconducting coplanar waveguide resonators with single-photon quality factors of 1.5 million

ORAL

Abstract

The investigation of loss mechanisms in superconducting coplanar waveguide (CPW) resonator provides an efficient means to elucidate relevant loss mechanisms affecting superconducting qubit circuits. As compared to superconducting qubits, the reduced complexity of CPW fabrication coupled with the straightforward characterization of CPW properties facilitates the deconvolution of the impact of individual fabrication steps on the CPW performance. We assess this impact by characterizing the statistically significant differences in internal quality factors (Q$_i$) at the single-photon level resulting from different fabrication processes in aluminum and titanium nitride (TiN) superconducting thin film CPW resonators on silicon. We demonstrate repeatable Qi's at the single-photon level of approximately 1.5x10\textsuperscript{6} in TiN CPW resonators with 90 percent of devices showing Q$_i$'s above 1x10$^6$ and single Q$_i$'s as high as 3.8x10$^6$. This work is sponsored in part by the Laboratory for Physical Science, IARPA, and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering under Air Force Contract FA8721-05-0002. Opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the United States Government.

Authors

  • Greg Calusine

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Danna Rosenberg

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • D. Hover

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Rabindra Das

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Alexander Melville

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Xhovalin Miloshi

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Wayne Woods

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Jonilyn Yoder

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • William Oliver

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory; Research Laboratory of Electronics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT Lincoln Laboratory; Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory, MIT Lincoln Laboratory