Design of fluxonium coupling and readout via SQUID couplers

ORAL

Abstract

The superconducting fluxonium qubit has emerged as a promising alternative to the widely-studied transmon qubit due to increased coherence times at the half-flux quantum sweet-spot, large anharmonicity, and robust charge-noise insensitivity. Scaling to multi-qubit fluxonium systems requires implementation of fast, high-fidelity, and highly expressive quantum gates, with small residual coupling when the gate is off. In this work we present the design of a 2D tunable coupler composed of a floating SQUID element achieving these requirements. We study the family of gates realizable with the phase coupling realized by the SQUID, and investigate their limits with regard to gate time, leakage, and drive-induced decoherence. We also study the element's suitability for fast, high fidelity readout for highly detuned fluxonium qubits retaining decoherence protection at half-flux quantum.

*This work was supported by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and the U.S. Army Research Office under contract/grant number W911NF-22-1-0258.

Presenters

  • Noah J Stevenson

    • University of California, Berkeley

Authors

  • Noah J Stevenson

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Zahra Pedramrazi

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Noah Kurt Goss

    • University of California, Berkeley
  • Abhishek Chakraborty

    • University of Rochester
  • Bibek Bhandari

    • Chapman University
  • D. Dominic Dominic Briseño-Colunga

    • Chapman University
  • Chuan-Hong Liu

    • University of California, Berkeley
    • Univ of California, Berkeley
  • Chuan-Hong Liu

    • University of California, Berkeley
    • Univ of California, Berkeley
  • Andrew N Jordan

    • Chapman University
  • Justin Dressel

    • Chapman University
  • David I Santiago

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Irfan Siddiqi

    • University of California, Berkeley