Publication | Open Access
Mitigation of frequency collisions in superconducting quantum processors
29
Citations
29
References
2023
Year
Quantum ScienceEngineeringQuantum ComputingPhysicsNatural SciencesQuantum DeviceApplied PhysicsSuperconductivityComputer EngineeringCross TalkFrequency CollisionsQubit ParametersQubit Shunt CapacitorQuantum EntanglementMicroelectronicsSuperconducting DevicesQuantum Error CorrectionQuantum Hardware
The reproducibility of qubit parameters is a challenge for scaling up superconducting quantum processors. Signal cross talk imposes constraints on the frequency separation between neighboring qubits. The frequency uncertainty of transmon qubits arising from the fabrication process is attributed to deviations in the Josephson junction area, tunnel barrier thickness, and the qubit shunt capacitor. We decrease the sensitivity to these variations by fabricating larger Josephson junctions and reduce the wafer-level standard deviation in resistance down to 2%. We characterize 32 identical transmon qubits and demonstrate the reproducibility of the qubit frequencies with a 40 MHz standard deviation (i.e., 1%) with qubit quality factors exceeding 2 million. We perform two-level-system (TLS) spectroscopy and observe no significant increase in the number of TLSs causing qubit relaxation. We further show by simulation that for our parametric-gate architecture, and accounting only for errors caused by the uncertainty of the qubit frequency, we can scale up to 100 qubits with an average of only three collisions between quantum-gate transition frequencies, assuming $2%$ cross talk and $99.9%$ target gate fidelity.
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