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Capacitively shunted flux qubit based on epitaxially grown NbN/AlN/NbN Josephson junctions on Si substrate

ORAL

Abstract

In superconducting qubits composed of aluminum-based Josephson junctions (JJs), the decoherence from microscopic two-level systems in amorphous aluminum oxide has long been a concern. As an alternative material for the qubits, fully epitaxial NbN/AlN/NbN JJs are an attractive candidate with the potential to solve the above problems because of its high crystal quality, chemical stability against oxidization, and relatively high transition temperature (~ 16 K) of NbN. Early studies of superconducting qubits using epitaxially grown nitride JJs have shown significant potential, but their coherence time was limited due to dielectric loss from the MgO substrate [1]. To improve this, we have employed a Si substrate with a TiN buffer layer for the epitaxial growth of this nitride JJs [2] and fabricated a capacitively shunted flux qubit. For the dispersive readout, the qubit is coupled to a half-wavelength coplanar waveguide resonator. We characterize the qubit relaxation time and dephasing time using spin-echo in the tens of microseconds range.
[1] Y. Nakamura et al., Appl. Phys. Lett., 99, 212502 (2011).
[2] K. Makise et al., IEEE Trans. Appl. Sup., 26, 1100403, (2016).

Presenters

  • Sunmi Kim

    NICT

Authors

  • Sunmi Kim

    NICT

  • Hirotaka Terai

    National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, NICT

  • Taro Yamashita

    Nagoya University, Electronics, Nagoya University

  • Wei Qiu

    NICT, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology

  • Tomoko Fuse

    NICT, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology

  • Fumiki Yoshihara

    NICT, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology

  • Kunihiro Inomata

    AIST, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

  • Kouichi Semba

    NICT, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology