High quality superconducting resonators from a magnetically-contaminated sputter system

ORAL

Abstract

Magnetic impurities are known to rapidly degrade superconductivity. For this reason, physical vapor deposition chambers that have been used previously for magnetic materials have generally been avoided for making high-quality superconducting resonator devices. In this talk, we show by example that such chambers can in fact still be used following some simple steps to minimize contamination. With niobium films sputtered in a chamber that has been and continues to be used for magnetic materials, we demonstrate compact, 3-μm gap, co-planar waveguide resonators with low-power internal quality factors surpassing one million. We additionally tested three methods of preparing silicon substrates prior to deposition, including anneal steps in the chamber at 700C, finding comparable quality factors. We are using this chamber to test various novel materials for superconducting resonators and Josephson junctions.

*This material is based upon work supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-23-1-0706. This work was performed in part at the Cornell NanoScale Facility (CNF), an NNCI member supported by NSF Grant NNCI-2025233

Presenters

  • Maciej W Olszewski

    • Cornell University

Authors

  • Maciej W Olszewski

    • Cornell University
  • Jadrien Timothy-Henke Paustian

    • Syracuse University
  • Tathagata Banerjee

    • Cornell University
  • Haoran Lu

    • Cornell University
  • Aleksandra Biedron

    • NY CREATES
  • Jorge L Ramirez

    • CU Boulder
  • Zhaslan Baraissov

    • Cornell University
  • David A Muller

    • Cornell University
  • Ivan V Pechenezhskiy

    • Syracuse University
  • Daniel C Ralph

    • Cornell University
  • Gregory D Fuchs

    • Cornell University
  • Corey Rae H McRae

    • University of Colorado Boulder / NIST Boulder
  • Britton L Plourde

    • University of Wisconsin-Madison
    • University of Wisconsin - Madison
  • Valla Fatemi

    • Cornell University