Materials for Quantum Technology (Jan 2024)

Enhanced superconducting qubit performance through ammonium fluoride etch

  • Cameron J Kopas,
  • Dominic P Goronzy,
  • Thang Pham,
  • Carlos G Torres Castanedo,
  • Matthew Cheng,
  • Rory Cochrane,
  • Patrick Nast,
  • Ella Lachman,
  • Nikolay Z Zhelev,
  • André Vallières,
  • Akshay A Murthy,
  • Jin-su Oh,
  • Lin Zhou,
  • Matthew J Kramer,
  • Hilal Cansizoglu,
  • Michael J Bedzyk,
  • Vinayak P Dravid,
  • Alexander Romanenko,
  • Anna Grassellino,
  • Josh Y Mutus,
  • Mark C Hersam,
  • Kameshwar Yadavalli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/2633-4356/ad88cc
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
p. 045101

Abstract

Read online

The performance of superconducting qubits is often limited by dissipation and two-level systems (TLS) losses. The dominant sources of these losses are believed to originate from amorphous materials and defects at interfaces and surfaces, likely as a result of fabrication processes or ambient exposure. Here, we explore a novel wet chemical surface treatment at the Josephson junction-substrate and the substrate-air interfaces by replacing a buffered oxide etch (BOE) cleaning process with one that uses hydrofluoric acid followed by aqueous ammonium fluoride. We show that the ammonium fluoride etch process results in a statistically significant improvement in median $\text{T}_1$ by $\sim22\%$ ( p = 0.002), and a reduction in the number of strongly-coupled TLS in the tunable frequency range. Microwave resonator measurements on samples treated with the ammonium fluoride etch after niobium deposition and etching also show $\sim33\%$ lower TLS-induced loss tangent compared to the BOE treated samples. As the chemical treatment primarily modifies the Josephson junction-substrate interface and substrate-air interface, we perform targeted chemical and structural characterizations to examine materials differences at these interfaces and identify multiple microscopic changes that could contribute to decreased TLS losses.

Keywords