Quantum-circuit refrigerator for reset of superconducting qubits

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum-circuit refrigerator (QCR) [1] is an active on-chip component which can change the dissipation rate in superconducting microwave devices in-situ by orders of magnitude. The dissipation channels can be turned on and off by applying a dc or rf voltage, or both [2]. Such an additional energy input together with an energy quantum from the refrigerated quantum circuit promotes photon-assisted quasiparticle tunneling through a normal-metal–insulator–superconductor junction. Previously, we have experimentally demonstrated that a QCR can change the quality factor of a superconducting microwave resonator by several orders of magnitude also giving rise to an effective Lamb shift of the resonator frequency [3] and that the dissipation can be turned on or off in a few nanoseconds [4]. We have also demonstrated that a superconducting qubit can be reset with a QCR from 100% to a few percent population in less than 100 ns. However, we observed non-exponential decay of the population rendering the optimization of the qubit reset involved. Here, we introduce a single-junction QCR [5] which simplifies the optimal control pulses, removes non-idealities related to junction asymmetry, increases the physical distance between the QCR and the qubit, and provides opportunities for optimizing the coupling strength for inimal spurious dissipation. We report on the first experiments of the single-junction QCR coupled to a transmon qubit and provide evidence supporting these claims.

*This work was financially supported by the European Research Council under Grant Nos. 681311 (QUESS), 957440 (SCAR), and 101053801 (ConceptQ) by the Academy of Finland under Grant No. 318937 and under its Centres of Excellence Program (projects 312300 and 312298), by the Finnish Cultural Foundation, and by Business Finland QuTI project.

Publication: [1] K. Y. Tan et al., Quantum-Circuit Refrigerator, Nature Commun. 8, 15189 (2017).
[2] A. Viitanen et al., Photon-number-dependent effective Lamb shift, Phys. Rev. Res. 3, 033126 (2021).
[3] M. Silveri et al., Broadband Lamb shift in an engineered quantum, Nat. Phys. 15, 533 (2019).
[4] V. Sevriuk et al., Fast control of dissipation in a superconducting resonator, Appl. Phys. Lett. 115, 082601 (2019).
[5] V. Vadimov et al., Single-junction quantum-circuit refrigerator, AIP Adv. 12, 075005 (2022).

Presenters

  • Mikko Möttönen

    • Aalto University

Authors

  • Mikko Möttönen

    • Aalto University
  • Timm F Mörstedt

    • QCD Labs, Aalto University
    • Aalto University
  • Vasilii Sevriuk

    • IQM
  • Matti Silveri

    • Univ of Oulu
    • University of Oulu
  • Gianluigi Catelani

    • Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
    • Forschungszentrum Jülich
  • Hao Hsu

    • Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
  • Louis Lattier

    • Aalto University
  • Maaria Tiiri

    • Aalto University
  • Tapio Ala-Nissila

    • Aalto University
  • Arto Viitanen

    • Aalto University
  • Máté Jenei

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM
  • Leif Grönberg

    • VTT Micro & Nanoelectronics
    • VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland
    • VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd
  • Wei Liu

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM Finland Oy
    • IQM
  • Jami Rönkkö

    • IQM
  • Fabian Marxer

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM
  • Matti Partanen

    • IQM
  • Jukka Räbinä

    • IQM
    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM Finland Oy
  • Johannes Heinsoo

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM Finland Oy
    • IQM
  • Tianyi Li

    • IQM Finland Oy
    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM
  • Jani Tuorila

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM
  • Vasilii Vadimov

    • Aalto University
  • Juha Hassel

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM Finland Oy
    • IQM
  • Kuan Y Tan

    • IQM Quantum Computers
    • IQM Finland Oy
    • IQM