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High-Q Tantalum Superconducting Resonators Fabricated at Room Temperature

ORAL

Abstract

The use of α-tantalum in superconducting circuits has enabled a considerable improvement of the coherence time of transmon qubits. The standard approach to grow α-tantalum thin films on silicon involves heating the substrate, which takes several hours per deposition and prevents the integration of this material in wafers containing temperature-sensitive components. In this presentation, we will demonstrate the potential of an alternative growth method, achieved at room temperature through the use of a seed layer, for the fabrication of superconducting resonators. Despite substantial differences in material properties between the films deposited at high and room-temperature, resonators produced with both types of films are found to have comparable state-of-the-art quality factors. We will discuss how this finding challenges previous assumptions regarding correlations between material properties and microwave loss of superconducting thin films.

Presenters

  • Guillaume Marcaud

    Center for Quantum Computing - Amazon Web Services, AWS Center for Quantum Computing

Authors

  • Guillaume Marcaud

    Center for Quantum Computing - Amazon Web Services, AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • David Perello

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Cliff Chen

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Esha Umbarkar

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Conan Weiland

    National Institute of Standards and Technology, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Material Measurement Laboratory, National Institute of Standard and Technology

  • Jiansong Gao

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Sandra Diez

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Victor Ly

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Neha Mahuli

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Nathan D'Souza

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Yuan He

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Shahriar Aghaeimeibodi

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, AWS

  • Cherno Jaye

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Daniel A Fischer

    National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Abdul Rumaiz

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Matt Matheny

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Matthew Hunt

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing

  • Oskar Painter

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, AWS Center for Quantum Computing; Caltech, AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Caltech

  • Ignace Jarrige

    AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Amazon Web Services