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Article

CUBIT: Capacitive qUantum BIT

Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology, University of Vienna, 1090 Vienna, Austria
Submission received: 1 May 2018 / Revised: 17 June 2018 / Accepted: 25 June 2018 / Published: 2 July 2018

Abstract

:
In this letter, it is proposed that cryogenic quantum bits can operate based on the nonlinearity due to the quantum capacitance of two-dimensional Dirac materials, and in particular graphene. The anharmonicity of a typical superconducting quantum bit is calculated, and the sensitivity of quantum bit frequency and anharmonicity with respect to temperature are found. Reasonable estimates reveal that a careful fabrication process can reveal expected properties, putting the context of quantum computing hardware into new perspectives.

1. Introduction

We discuss a new type of qubit with integrability, based on a nonlinear quantum capacitor (QC) made of two-dimensional materials [1], graphene (Gr), and boron nitride (BN) and their heterostructures [2,3]. Without exception, all existing superconducting qubits [4,5,6,7,8,9] rely on the nonlinear inductance of Josephson junctions (JJs). Here, the nonlinear inductance is replaced by the nonlinear capacitance coming from two Gr monolayers separated by a multilayer BN, which acts as a potential barrier and forms a parallel plate capacitance [1].
The nonlinearity of such a quantum capacitor stems from the two-dimensionality of crystal combined with the Dirac cone in its band structure, where a square-root correspondence between the Fermi energy E F and external voltage V is established. There is no fundamental reason why other 2D Dirac materials, such as silicene and germanene [10,11,12,13] could not be used for this purpose.
On the practical side, two major obstacles seem to influence the design. One is the compatibility of Gr with superconducting circuits, and the next one is the potential puddles arising from crystal imperfections and impurities. Recent progress on large-scale and near-perfect crystalline growth of Gr [14], which is equally applicable to BN, should in principle resolve the issues tied to the puddles to a great extent. Additionally, recent discoveries on the existence of the p-wave-induced phase of superconductivity in Gr [15] as well as the unconventional superconducting phase of the twisted bilayer Gr at the magic angle of 19.19 mRad [16] raises hopes for the practicality of such a design. The latter offers a large decrease in Fermi velocity at the vicinity of Dirac cone, which helps in a significant reduction in qubit size as well as the relaxation of stringing limits imposed by the fabrication technology.
It is the purpose of this letter to establish the feasibility of CUBIT, which we use to refer to the nonlinear Capacitive qUantum BIT. While we present the numerical design of a preliminary CUBIT, the fundamental aspects and practicality issues involved are also discussed. Another potentially useful application of nonlinear quantum capacitance could be in the cryogenic quantum-limited parametric amplifiers.

2. Results

This sandwich structure shown in Figure 1 is routinely used owing to its peculiar electronic and optical properties [17,18]. Quite interestingly, its application to a quantum-dot charge qubit design has been also demonstrated [19], which is however incompatible with the conventional superconducting quantum circuits.
For the BN thickness of 3 to 70 nm, the contribution of the geometric parallel plate capacitance of the structure can be neglected, and the quantum capacitance is given by [4,20,21]
C Q = 2 e 2 S k B T π ( v F ) 2 ln 2 1 + cosh E F k B T
where v F is the Fermi velocity of graphene, k B is the Boltzmann’s constant, e is the electronic charge, S is the total geometric 2D area of capacitor, and T is the absolute temperature. Evidently, the quantum capacitance is nonlinear since it depends on the applied voltage V = 2 E F / e .
The recently discovered superconductivity in the twisted bilayer Gr at the magic angle [16] offers a roughly 7-fold reduction in v F . This can cause a significant reduction of the necessary capacitance area up to a factor of roughly 50, since C Q S / v F 2 , while maintaining the same level of anharmonicity A. However, such a structure needs voltage bias and cannot accommodate a large number of carriers. That would necessitate a serious look and a separate study.
The bulk of the proposed qubit is a nonlinear anharmonic oscillator, which forbids transitioning from | 0 to | n ; n > 1 states with a given fixed pump. This has been schematically shown in Figure 2. Signal can be fed into the oscillator by inductive coupling, or capacitive coupling similar to the qubits based on Josephson junctions [6,22]. The strength of anharmonicity could be adjusted by temperature as well as other available design parameters of the layered capacitor.
The total linear and nonlinear part of the QC can then be expanded as a power series in terms of the applied voltage. By placing a linear inductor across the QC, the total Hamiltonian up to the fifth order is found, with remarkably large anharmonicity A. It is possible to tweak the design flexibility by placing a shunt linear capacitor across the QC. It is found that A rapidly increases as the temperature decreases and is a strong function of the capacitance area [1], and temperatures of a few 0.1 K easily yield strong nonlinearity. Signal can be fed into the qubit oscillator by inductive or capacitive coupling, similar to the qubits based on JJs [4].
It is possible to tweak the design flexibility by placing the linear capacitors C S and C P , respectively, in series and across the quantum capacitor as shown in Figure 2 in green. This placement of the shunt capacitor C P also could relax the restriction on the maximum operation temperature given as ω > 2 k B T . It should be noted that the existence of extra capacitors decreases the large anharmonicity delivered by the quantum capacitance C Q .
Shown in Figure 3, it is furthermore possible to combine the QC with JJs, where A is caused by the combined effects of JJ and QC. Quite clearly, the resonance frequency of the circuit is now also dependent on the linear inductance of the JJ as well. A proper design can cause complete cancellation of or enhancement in the anharmonicity of A, leaving nonlinear terms of sixth and higher orders. Furthermore, positive or negative A become now both accessible, using appropriate biasing of the JJs.
The combined effects of such an anharmonic oscillator can be expressed by the Hamiltonian
H = ω a ^ a ^ + 1 2 + 1 4 ω ( α ω τ ) a ^ + a ^ 4
where α is the contribution of JJs, and τ is the characteristic time of nonlinear interaction for the quantum capacitor [4]. This value has already been estimated theoretically [4] for a weakly nonlinear regime, which is not obviously a matter of interest in qubit design. The reason is that the anharmonicity should actually be large to guarantee two-level operation of the oscillator, strictly allowing no more than 1 photon at the qubit frequency ω to survive in the oscillator. Therefore, in this study, τ has been numerically estimated by an accurate solution of the nonlinear Hamiltonian potential and by obtaining the energy eigenvalue levels. Energy eigenvalues were found using a recent semi-analytical method reported elsewhere [23], which is at least as reliable as WKB but much easier to implement.
While it may seem at first that the nonlinearity is too large to be acceptable, it should be kept in mind that the quantum capacitance of an ideal Gr sheet tends to be singular with infinite derivative at zero temperature. At finite temperature, this singularity is less sharpened and less pronounced, which ultimately results in a large anharmonicity, inversely increasing with the third power of absolute temperature. When the Gr sheet is non-ideal because of potential puddles and other crystal imperfections, this sharpness can reduce, and beyond a certain density of puddles, the useful and available single-photon anharmonicity vanishes. This is discussed in Section 3.
Since the limiting cases and truncated expansions may not be sufficiently accurate, the anharmonicity was studied with a completely numerical approach, where limiting expressions of the type reported in the previous study [4] no longer hold true and significantly deviate from exact values. The numerical computations are rather elaborate; therefore, instead of a description of the entire algorithm and minor details, the Mathematica calculation packages have been made freely available to readers as Supplementary Information.
As it goes with the analytical form of Hamiltonian, analytical expansions such as Equation (2) allow significant anharmonicity to appear when the rotating wave approximation is applied, that is, when the time-independent terms are kept and the rest are dropped. This will still allow a significant anharmonic behavior to emerge in the form of an effective Kerr Hamiltonian, as long as τ ω < < 1 can be violated. Yet, a Kerr Hamiltonian is accurate only up to the fourth order, while the nonlinear behavior of cubits implies that all even higher powers of number operators will appear. This will set restrictions on the accuracy and usefulness of Equation (2), which ultimately necessitates a full numerical approach.
Since the structure has to operate inside a dilution refrigerator with some temperature instability and drift over time, and the fact that the quantum capacitance is a function of temperature, one should make an estimate of qubit frequency ω = 2 π f variations with temperature.
Additionally, the proposed qubit as an anharmonic oscillator is also dependent on the graphene area as well. One may put the nonlinear Hamiltonian of the whole qubit together and solve for the eigenstates, which correspondingly yield the energy eigenvalues and therefore the anharmonicity. A typical dependence of the potential energy of the anharmonic circuit, including contributions of the quantum and series capacitance looks like the following in Figure 4.
Since the oscillator is strongly anharmonic, the ultimate actual transition frequency can be different from the initial value by design. This anharmonicity is not only a function of temperature but also a function of capacitor area, too. This dependence has been investigated as follows in Figure 5.
The largest available range of anharmonicity occurs at the capacitor area of the order of 5 × 10 4 μ m 2 to 10 5 μ m 2 . Hence, a desirable capacitor size could be chosen to be around 50 μ m × 1 mm , which together an inductor of 60 nH would yield a qubit frequency of ω = 2 π × 3.55 GHz . This area is evidently small enough to be considered for easy fabrication and integration. The temperature sensitivity could be observed by inspection of the temperature-dependent variations of qubit frequency. This is illustrated in Figure 6.
This calculation gives the estimates of
f T = 19 MHz mK , A T = 0.027 % mK ,
which at an operation temperature of 25 mK are equivalent to the operational sensitivities of
S f T = f / f T / T × 100 % = 9.5 % S A T = A / A T / T × 100 % = 6.1 % .
Some design numbers are shown in Table 1, while redesigning with a series capacitor of 0.1 to 1 pF gives the data in Table 2.
No surprise that the presence of the series capacitor should cause a reduction in anharmonicity A, since it makes the capacitive behavior of the whole circuit more linear. In general, increasing the frequency while reducing the capacitor area seems to lead into an even more desirable set of numbers shown in Table 3.
Here, we ultimately choose the capacitor area of S = 5 × 10 4 μ m 2 , which is 50 μ m wide and 1 mm long, together with an inductor of L = 60 nH , which yields the qubit frequency of ω = 2 π × 3.55 GHz , and anharmonicity of A = 11 % . The zero-point voltage and carrier number at the qubit frequency is estimated to be around V zp = 15 μ V and n zp = 1.7 . All contacts and connecting materials can be chosen to be aluminum, since not only does it easily superconduct at the temperatures of interest but is also a quite typical metal of choice in superconducting qubits.
It has to be mentioned again that employing the superconducting bilayer graphene [16] can in principle cause up to a 50-fold reduction in qubit area. That would limit the typical qubit area only to S = 10 3 μ m 2 , which is now a highly reasonable value.

3. Practical Considerations

3.1. Potential Puddles

In graphene, non-ideal impurities and defects at the interface do exist. Although their density can be minimized by exfoliation under high-vacuum and encapsulations with 2D hexagonal BN, they persist to certain densities. Traps form shallow potential kinks, named as puddles.
Puddles are expected to be frozen and unmoving at ultralow temperatures. But their density and potential depth can be a matter of concern. For the quantum capacitance of Gr to survive, it is estimated that the puddle surface density must be under N pd < 10 8 cm 2 , which is roughly 1 defect per every 10 8 Carbon atom in Gr lattice. Furthermore, puddle potential energy depth must be bounded by U pd < 10 meV . Values exceeding these bounds are undesirable and result in destroying the quantum capacitance property of Gr.
Typical values that are achieved in the experiments are not better than 10 10 cm 2 yet. While this might seem a bit disappointing, the recent remarkable progress in very large-scale crystalline CVD growth of Gr and 2D materials [14] highlights the likelihood of this possibility, and even much better values to be attained soon.
The superconducting twisted bilayer graphene at the magic angle [16] can not only result in a significant reduction of qubit size but also may largely relax the constraints on the puddle density. This can be studied in depth either by ab initio approaches such as the density function theory (DFT) or through a series of carefully conducted experiments.

3.2. Zero-Point Fluctuations

With regard to the effect of impurity charges, these appear as a background bias in the overall charge density. For a designed device to be practically useful at the single photon level, the zero-point charge fluctuations should exceed the impurity charges. The correct way to obtain zero-point amplitudes is to look for the corresponding values that reproduce the energy of half-quanta 1 2 ω .

3.3. Decoherence and Dephasing

Possible mechanisms for qubit decoherence and dephasing may be considered, which include but are not limited to spontaneous emission from excited states, enhancement of emission rate due to the Purcell enhancement (when the qubit is placed inside a high-Q microwave cavity), substrate dielectric losses, nonideal proximity effects of carrier transport in graphene, tunneling across the dielectric due to defects and periphery surface states, coupling to spurious modes and surface acoustic waves, charge noise, flux noise, and strain noise (which cause fluctuations and anisotropy in the Fermi velocity v F ).
Some of these have already been studied for transmon qubits [6,22], and their practical limits have been evaluated. Some have to be studied in great detail and require deep theoretical study. A 0 - π qubit design strategy that offers inherent immunity with respect to decoherence has been introduced very recently [24]. While this has yet to be tested experimentally, a topological dual of this strategy may in principle be applied to the anharmonic CUBIT under consideration here as well.
One has to keep in mind that superconducting qubits have already come a long way over the past 18 years, with their coherence times being initially only around 1 ns [6]. Meanwhile, the coherence performance of transmons is now for all practical reasons being saturated to 0.1 ms for the best available designs and fabrication processes, such as the one being used in IBM-Q. That would already be a 10 5 fold improvement.

3.4. Parametric Amplifiers

An alternative potential use for this type of non-dissipative cryogenic nonlinear element could be in parametric amplifiers, which are of rather high importance in quantum science and technology. This can happen even if the qubit design criteria cannot be satisfied. The existing parametric amplifiers mostly are based on either JJs held at the same temperature of cryostat or high-electron mobility transistors (HEMTs) made of III-V semiconductor heterostructures, held typically at the operation temperature of 4 K, far above the temperature of dilution fridge. Besides the added noise as a result of higher-operation temperatures, the usage of HEMTs increases the complexity of circuit designs and interfacing. Existence of nonlinear quantum capacitors can offer added flexibility and convenience to this particular application.

4. Conclusions & Future Work

The graphene/boron nitride/graphene sandwich structure seems to be promising for quantum bit applications, where the nonlinearity of quantum capacitance replaces the nonlinearity of JJs. This should significantly alleviate the problem of cross-talk and altogether remove the qubit decoherence due to interference with stray magnetic fields. Using the bilayer graphene at the magic angle could be a game changer, however, the effects of potential puddles require careful study. It is probable that only experiments will be able to determine whether such sandwich structures can envision prospects of new qubits with enhanced decoherence and dephasing properties.
As the anharmonicity stems from the quantum capacitance linked with one external linear inductor, any coupling to the circuit that modifies the effective inductance seen by the nonlinear oscillator shall modify the operating criteria. Study of an open multi-cubit system with mutual couplings and amplifiers, as well as the involved quantum circuit architecture can be a very good idea to pursue. Inductive coupling among cubits could eventually result in useful quantum coherence with superior characteristics [25,26,27]. Finally, the recently developed method of higher-order operators has shown promise [28] for analysis of nonlinear stochastic processes in quantum non-demolition measurements and quantum-limited parametric amplifiers. This could extend its possible applications to further study nonlinear superconducting quantum circuits in quantum computing.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/2311-5629/4/3/39/s1: Mathematica packages for calculation of quantum capacitance and anharmonic energy eigenstates, as well as the temperature stability of CUBIT.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Acknowledgments

Discussions of this work with Sungkun Hong at the Universität Wien, Thomas Müller at the Technische Universität Wien, Amir Yacoby at Harvard University, John D. Teufel at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and Clément Javerzac-Galy at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne are highly appreciated. A preliminary version of this study was presented at the Frontiers of Cricuit QED and Optomechanics, which was held on 12–14 February 2018 at the Institute of Science and Technology, Klosterneuburg, Austria.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no competing or conflict of any financial and non-financial interests.

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Figure 1. Graphene/boron nitride/graphene sandwich structure. Wide aluminum contacts are attached across the edges.
Figure 1. Graphene/boron nitride/graphene sandwich structure. Wide aluminum contacts are attached across the edges.
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Figure 2. Illustration of the basic capacitive quantum bit design. The addition of series and parallel extra capacitors adds up to the design flexibility.
Figure 2. Illustration of the basic capacitive quantum bit design. The addition of series and parallel extra capacitors adds up to the design flexibility.
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Figure 3. Illustration of a combined nonlinear quantum capacitance and Josephson junction (JJ) design.
Figure 3. Illustration of a combined nonlinear quantum capacitance and Josephson junction (JJ) design.
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Figure 4. Calculation of energy levels of the anharmonic oscillator composed of nonlinear quantum capacitor and linear inductor shown in Figure 2.
Figure 4. Calculation of energy levels of the anharmonic oscillator composed of nonlinear quantum capacitor and linear inductor shown in Figure 2.
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Figure 5. Variations of qubit frequency and anharmonicity versus operation temperature of the dilution fridge.
Figure 5. Variations of qubit frequency and anharmonicity versus operation temperature of the dilution fridge.
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Figure 6. Contour plots of anharmonicity and qubit frequency versus temperature and qubit area.
Figure 6. Contour plots of anharmonicity and qubit frequency versus temperature and qubit area.
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Table 1. Qubit designs with no series capacitor S = 1 mm 2 .
Table 1. Qubit designs with no series capacitor S = 1 mm 2 .
S ( B 2 )Design ω / 2 π (GHz)T (mK) C S (fF)Actual ω / 2 π (GHz)A (%)
12.5252.293.9
15254.416.04
110258.318.26
Table 2. Qubit designs with a series capacitor S = 1 mm 2 .
Table 2. Qubit designs with a series capacitor S = 1 mm 2 .
S ( mm 2 )Design ω / 2 π (GHz)T (mK) C S (fF)Actual ω / 2 π (GHz)A (%)
12.5251002.390.44
15251004.770.76
1102510008.715.67
Table 3. Qubit designs with no series capacitor S = 0 . 1 mm 2 .
Table 3. Qubit designs with no series capacitor S = 0 . 1 mm 2 .
S ( mm 2 )Design ω / 2 π (GHz)T (mK) C S (fF)Actual ω / 2 π (GHz)A (%)
0.110256.4211.2
0.1152511.19.02
0.1202511.511.1

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Khorasani, S. CUBIT: Capacitive qUantum BIT. C 2018, 4, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/c4030039

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Khorasani S. CUBIT: Capacitive qUantum BIT. C. 2018; 4(3):39. https://doi.org/10.3390/c4030039

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Khorasani, Sina. 2018. "CUBIT: Capacitive qUantum BIT" C 4, no. 3: 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/c4030039

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