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Observation of Josephson harmonics in tunnel junctions.

Dennis WillschDennis RiegerPatrick WinkelMadita WillschChristian DickelJonas KrauseYoichi AndoRaphaël LescanneZaki LeghtasNicholas T BronnPratiti DebOlivia LanesZlatko K MinevBenedikt DennigSimon GeisertSimon GünzlerSören IhssenPatrick PaluchThomas ReisingerRoudy HannaJin Hee BaePeter SchüffelgenDetlev GrützmacherLuiza Buimaga-IarincaCristian MorariWolfgang WernsdorferDavid P DiVincenzoKristel MichielsenGianluigi CatelaniIoan M Pop
Published in: Nature physics (2024)
Approaches to developing large-scale superconducting quantum processors must cope with the numerous microscopic degrees of freedom that are ubiquitous in solid-state devices. State-of-the-art superconducting qubits employ aluminium oxide (AlO x ) tunnel Josephson junctions as the sources of nonlinearity necessary to perform quantum operations. Analyses of these junctions typically assume an idealized, purely sinusoidal current-phase relation. However, this relation is expected to hold only in the limit of vanishingly low-transparency channels in the AlO x barrier. Here we show that the standard current-phase relation fails to accurately describe the energy spectra of transmon artificial atoms across various samples and laboratories. Instead, a mesoscopic model of tunnelling through an inhomogeneous AlO x barrier predicts percent-level contributions from higher Josephson harmonics. By including these in the transmon Hamiltonian, we obtain orders of magnitude better agreement between the computed and measured energy spectra. The presence and impact of Josephson harmonics has important implications for developing AlO x -based quantum technologies including quantum computers and parametric amplifiers. As an example, we show that engineered Josephson harmonics can reduce the charge dispersion and associated errors in transmon qubits by an order of magnitude while preserving their anharmonicity.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • solid state
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