APS Logo

Argon milling induced loss mechanisms in superconducting quantum circuits

ORAL

Abstract

The fabrication of superconducting circuits requires multiple deposition, etch and cleaning steps, each possibly introducing material property changes and microscopic defects. In this work we specifically investigate the process of argon milling on niobium and aluminum as a potential coherence limiting process. We find that niobium microwave resonators show an order of magnitude decrease in quality-factors after surface argon milling, while aluminum resonators are resilient to the same process. We characterize the Nb surface with XPS, AFM, and STEM. The argon milled niobium surface regrows a layered oxide structure of primarily Nb2O5 causing an increase in both two-level-system defect losses and residual losses. Two-tone spectroscopy measurements reveal increased two-level-system electrical dipole moments of the average tunneling defect at the argon milled niobium surface. A carefully timed etch fully removes the induced losses and shows a path towards state-of-the-art overlap Josephson junction based qubits on niobium.

Publication: We are working on a manuscript

Presenters

  • Jacques Van Damme

    KU Leuven

Authors

  • Jacques Van Damme

    KU Leuven

  • Anton Potocnik

    IMEC

  • Kristiaan De Greve

    IMEC

  • Tsvetan Ivanov

    IMEC, imec

  • Jeroen Verjauw

    IMEC

  • Rohith Acharya

    Katholieke Univ Leuven

  • Daniel Perez Lozano

    IMEC, imec, Interuniversity Microelectronics Centre

  • A. M. Vadiraj

    IMEC, imec

  • Paola Favia

    IMEC

  • Massimo Mongillo

    IMEC, imec

  • Danny Wan

    IMEC, imec

  • Jo De Boeck

    IMEC