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Circulation by Microwave-Induced Vortex Transport for Signal Isolation

ORAL

Abstract

Magnetic fields break time-reversal symmetry, which is leveraged in many settings to enable the nonreciprocal behavior of light. This is the core physics of circulators and other elements used in a variety of microwave and optical settings. Commercial circulators in the microwave domain typically use ferromagnetic materials and wave interference, requiring large devices and large fields. However, quantum information devices for sensing and computation require small sizes, lower fields, and better on-chip integration. Here we show that the quantum-coherent motion of a single vortex in a small Josephson junction array suffices to induce nonreciprocal behavior, enabling a small-scale, moderate-bandwidth, and low insertion loss circulator at very low magnetic fields and at microwave frequencies relevant for experiments with qubits. Further, we show that circulator performance is resistant to charge noise and explore a design variation that may aid in device realization.

Publication: https://doi.org/10.1103/PRXQuantum.2.030309

Presenters

  • Brittany R Richman

    University of Maryland, College Park

Authors

  • Brittany R Richman

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Jacob M Taylor

    Joint Quantum Institute and Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science, NIST & University of Maryalnd College Park, National Institute of Standards and Technology