3D-Integrated Superconducting Qubits: CMOS-Compatible, Wafer-Scale Processing for Flip-Chip Architectures
ORAL
Abstract
In this contribution, we present a CMOS-compatible, foundry-style fabrication process of a 24-single-qubit test-chip design, which is flip-chip bonded to a carrier chip via an indium-microbump technology, specifically developed for high frequency 3D signal routing and minimal tilt between qubit and carrier chip. Furthermore, the carrier chip technology opens a path towards large number qubit systems by the mounting of several QPUs on the same carrier.
The fabrication of qubit and carrier chips is conducted on 8” (200 mm) Si-wafers, exclusively employing established processes from the semiconductor industry and thus leveraging state-of-the-art process precision and control. The qubit chip is fabricated in an all-Al design and uses an Al/TiN/In metallization for flip-chip bonding satisfying a CMOS-compatible processing order. A newly developed bump technology on the carrier chip aims to provide minimal tilt within the chip-to-chip bonding process and uses a Nb/In metallization for superconducting connections. We furthermore present a second technology using a Nb/In stack for the bumps on both chips to further widen the range of applications of the technology.
Cryogenic measurements at ~10 mK show that the technologies enable the effective transfer of CW and pulsed microwave signals from the carrier chip to the qubits with negligible attenuation and demonstrate qubit excitation with a yield exceeding 90% in one-tone spectroscopy, underscoring the high potential of our technology.
The fabrication of qubit and carrier chips is conducted on 8” (200 mm) Si-wafers, exclusively employing established processes from the semiconductor industry and thus leveraging state-of-the-art process precision and control. The qubit chip is fabricated in an all-Al design and uses an Al/TiN/In metallization for flip-chip bonding satisfying a CMOS-compatible processing order. A newly developed bump technology on the carrier chip aims to provide minimal tilt within the chip-to-chip bonding process and uses a Nb/In metallization for superconducting connections. We furthermore present a second technology using a Nb/In stack for the bumps on both chips to further widen the range of applications of the technology.
Cryogenic measurements at ~10 mK show that the technologies enable the effective transfer of CW and pulsed microwave signals from the carrier chip to the qubits with negligible attenuation and demonstrate qubit excitation with a yield exceeding 90% in one-tone spectroscopy, underscoring the high potential of our technology.
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Presenters
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Thomas Mayer
Fraunhofer EMFT
Authors
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Thomas Mayer
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Hannes Bender
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Simon Lang
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Luis Schwarzenbach
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Waltraud Hell
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Johannes Weber
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Carla Morán Guizán
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Chawki Dhieb
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Daniela Zahn
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Zhen Luo
Technical University of Munich (TUM), Fraunhofer EMFT, TU Munich
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Mihail Andronic
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Armin Klumpp
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Andreas Drost
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Karl Neumeier
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Wilfried Lerch
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Lars Nebrich
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Ignaz Eisele
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Rui N Pereira
Fraunhofer EMFT
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Christoph Kutter
Fraunhofer EMFT