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A Compact, Extensible, and Flexible Cable Solution for Superconducting Qubit

ORAL

Abstract

As cryogenic quantum processors grow to larger qubit counts, the ability to efficiently route microwave signals into and out of a dilution refrigerator is quickly becoming a critical engineering challenge. The legacy approach to this routing leverages coaxial cable, which is optimal for crosstalk reduction and low-loss signal transmission but is intrinsically limited by connector size and cable fragility as cable radius decreases. Flex-printed cables, made from single- or multi-layer printed circuits on non-rigid substrates, offer the potential for low-crosstalk, high-density, physically robust cryogenic signal transfer. Here, we present a flex-print cable solution based on a stripline geometry as well as compact attenuator breakouts to ensure appropriate signal attenuation and thermalization. We demonstrate that the performance of qubits driven and measured via flex-print cable is not degraded relative to their performance when driven via standard coaxial cable.

Presenters

  • John Cummings

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

Authors

  • John Cummings

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Xhovalin Miloshi

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Gabriel Cutter

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Steven J Weber

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Felipe Contipelli

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Renée D DePencier Piñero

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Michael Gingras

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Jennifer Hritz

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Madeline Morocco

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Bethany M Niedzielski

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Kyle Serniak

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Hannah M Stickler

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • William D Oliver

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

  • Jonilyn L Yoder

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Cyrus F Hirjibehedin

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory

  • Mollie E Schwartz

    MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology