Tunneling of Hydrogen and Deuterium in Niobium: Embedded TLSs in Quantum Devices

ORAL

Abstract

Hydrogen (H) and deuterium (D) tunneling in niobium (Nb) trapped by oxygen (O) impurities is a potential source of two-level system (TLS) loss that can limit the performance of quantum devices operating in the 1-10 GHz regime [1]. We report our results based on density functional theory (DFT) and related methods for the trapping energies of H/D at interstitial sites, the double-well potential that determines H/D tunneling states, and the wave functions and tunnel-split levels of of H/D trapped by O at interstitial sites within BCC Nb. We show that O is localized at the octahedral site and that there are several possible sites where H can be trapped in the near vicinity of O. These include the pair of tetrahedral sites proposed by Magerl et al [2]. The calculated energy levels of the ground and first excited states, and thus the tunnel splittings for H and D, compare well with the results reported from low temperature heat capacity measurements and inelastic neutron scattering; JH = 0.19 meV and JD = 0.021 meV. The effects of O strain on the distribution of TLS levels are discussed.

[1] A. Abogoda, et al., DOI:10.48550/arXiv.2409.09014 (2024).

[2] A. Magerl et al., Phys. Rev. B 27, 927 (1983).

*The research we report was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, National Quantum Information Science Research Centers, Superconducting Quantum Materials and Systems Center (SQMS) under contract number DE-AC02-07CH11359 and US Air Force Sponsored Office of Research award FA9550-23-1-0709.

Publication: A. Abogoda, W. A. Shelton, I. Vekhter, and J. A. Sauls, Hydrogen and Deuterium Tunneling in Niobium, arXiv:2409.09014.

Presenters

  • Abdulaziz Abogoda

    • Northwestern University

Authors

  • Abdulaziz Abogoda

    • Northwestern University
  • J. A Sauls

    • Louisiana State University
  • Ilya Vekhter

    • Louisiana State University
  • William A Shelton

    • Louisiana State University