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Flux-port Isolation in Radio-frequency Quantum Upconverters

ORAL

Abstract

The superconducting radio-frequency quantum upconverter (RQU) leverages the flux-dependent inductance of a three-junction interferometer to upconvert low-frequency signals (<300 MHz) to microwave frequencies, enabling sensitive quantum measurement protocols such as backaction evasion. The RQU design incorporates a microwave resonator terminated by a Josephson junction interferometer, which is biased via inductively coupled flux loops. However, these flux bias ports can introduce loss and decoherence through parasitic coupling between the low-frequency flux bias and high-frequency flux signal lines, as well as coupling to parasitic resonance modes. I present designs to isolate the low-frequency bias lines from the flux signal lines and the high-frequency RF circuit. The analysis includes simulation of RQUs in Sonnet with on-chip isolation and filter circuits, showing effective mitigation of losses to preserve the resonator's coherence and quality factor, and elimination of mode hybridization. I also compare to experimental data. Eliminating bias flux port loss and hybridization is essential to enable backaction-evading measurements that require long microwave coherence times.

Presenters

  • Christina Bell

    Stanford University

Authors

  • Christina Bell

    Stanford University

  • Victoria Ankel

    Stanford University

  • Chelsea Bartram

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford University

  • Hsiao-Mei Cho

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Jason Young Ho Corbin

    Stanford University

  • Ameya Kunder

    Stanford University

  • Nicholas M Rapidis

    Stanford University

  • Chiara P Salemi

    Stanford University

  • Maria Simanovskaia

    Stanford University

  • Jyotirmai Singh

    Stanford University

  • Elizabeth Cady van Assendelft

    Stanford University

  • Dean Wright

    Stanford University

  • Kent David Irwin

    Stanford University