量子科学论坛(89)|加州理工学院陈墨博士后作报告

2023/06/18

【时间】20-June-2023(Tuesday)2PM (Beijing time)

【地点】量子院526会议室

【报告人】Mo Chen(California Institute of Technology, USA)

【主持人】Fei Yan(BAQIS)



【题目】Phonon engineering of TLS defects in superconducting circuits



【摘要】Superconducting quantum processors have emerged as the leading platform for quantum computing, with demonstrated potential for quantum error correction. However, achieving scalable fault-tolerant quantum computation requires significant improvements in qubit coherence, which is primarily limited by the presence of microscopic two-level system (TLS) defects at the qubit's constituent material interfaces. Under the assumption that the unfavorable TLS properties cannot be changed, previous efforts to tackle this challenge mostly focused on superconducting circuit designs that reduce the negative impact of TLS, but advancements have started to plateau.

In this seminar, I will introduce an orthogonal approach that engineers TLS properties and makes them favorable. First, I will introduce a hybrid platform which embeds the superconducting circuits and TLS within an acoustic metamaterial design that features a GHz-wide acoustic bandgap at microwave frequencies. This bandgap structures the acoustic bath of TLS, suppresses direct phonon emission from TLS, and extends their relaxation time by two to three orders of magnitude, with the longest T1 exceeding 5 ms. Next, I will discuss quantum sensing of individual low-frequency TLS fluctuators (MHz) in this hybrid platform, using the long-lived TLS as a probe to gain further insights into the defect physics.

【报告人简介】Mo Chen is a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Applied Physics and the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter at the California Institute of Technology. He received his B.S. in Optics from Fudan University in 2012 and his S.M. and Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2015 and 2020, respectively. His research interests are focused on gaining a fundamental understanding of device physics and applying that knowledge to engineer novel quantum devices, such as qubits, quantum sensors, and quantum memories.