APS Logo

Investigating the coherence properties of HBARs with classical and quantum sensors

ORAL

Abstract

High overtone bulk acoustic wave resonators (HBARs) have been successfully integrated with superconducting qubits into hybrid quantum systems with many applications in quantum information technologies [1,2]. Their success strongly relies on the excellent coherence properties of the mechanical modes. Nevertheless, a full understanding of the limiting loss mechanisms affecting multimode HBAR devices is still missing. In the present work, we use microwave antennas to characterize the quality factors of hundreds of HBAR modes in a several-GHz frequency span. We observe near state-of-the-art quality factors for our devices, ranging from 1 to 10 million at cryogenic temperatures, resulting in frequency-quality factor products of fxQ~1016. The systematic comparison between HBARs of different thickness allows us to identify surface roughness as one of the limiting loss mechanisms affecting the higher frequency modes. We also compare these results to measurements of the phonon lifetimes in the single-excitation regime using a flux-tunable superconducting qubit, finding good agreement between the results of measurements in the classical and quantum regimes.

[1] Y. Chu, et.al. Science 358 (6360), 199-202 (2017).

[2] U. von Luepke, et.al. Nature Physics 20, 564-570 (2024)

Presenters

  • Raquel Garcia Belles

    ETH Zurich

Authors

  • Raquel Garcia Belles

    ETH Zurich

  • Arianne Brooks

    ETH Zurich

  • Lukas Felix Deeg

    University of Innsbruck

  • Pietro Borghi

    ETH Zurich

  • Hugo Doeleman

    ETH Zurich

  • Uwe von Lüpke

    ETH Zürich

  • Maxwell Drimmer

    ETH Zurich

  • Joost Bus

    ETH Zurich, ETH Zürich

  • Gerhard Kirchmair

    University of Innsbruck

  • Yiwen Chu

    ETH Zurich