Sebastian T. Skacel
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Sebastian T. Skacel.
Physical Review B | 2015
Jochen Braumüller; Joel Cramer; Steffen Schlör; Hannes Rotzinger; Lucas Radtke; A. Lukashenko; Ping Yang; Sebastian T. Skacel; Sebastian Probst; Michael Marthaler; Lingzhen Guo; Alexey V. Ustinov; Martin Weides
We report on the investigation of a superconducting anharmonic multilevel circuit that is coupled to a harmonic readout resonator. We observe multiphoton transitions via virtual energy levels of our system up to the fifth excited state. The back-action of these higher-order excitations on our readout device is analyzed quantitatively and demonstrated to be in accordance with theoretical expectation. By applying a strong microwave drive we achieve multiphoton dressing within our anharmonic circuit which is dynamically coupled by a weak probe tone. The emerging higher-order Rabi sidebands and associated Autler-Townes splittings involving up to five levels of the investigated anharmonic circuit are observed. Experimental results are in good agreement with master-equation simulations.
Superconductor Science and Technology | 2017
Hannes Rotzinger; Sebastian T. Skacel; Marco Pfirrmann; Jan Nicolas Voss; J. Münzberg; Sebastian Probst; Pavel Bushev; Martin Weides; Alexey V. Ustinov; J. E. Mooij
We investigate thin films of conducting aluminium-oxide, also known as granular aluminium, as a material for superconducting high quality, high kinetic inductance circuits. The films are deposited by an optimised reactive DC magnetron sputter process and characterised using microwave measurement techniques at milli-Kelvin temperatures. We show that, by precise control of the reactive sputter conditions, a high room temperature sheet resistance and therefore high kinetic inductance at low temperatures can be obtained. For a coplanar waveguide resonator with 1.5,k
Physical Review B | 2017
Susanne Richer; Sebastian T. Skacel; Nataliya Maleeva; Ioan M. Pop
Omega
Applied Physics Letters | 2017
Lukas Grünhaupt; Uwe von Lüpke; Daria Gusenkova; Sebastian T. Skacel; Nataliya Maleeva; Steffen Schlör; Alexander Bilmes; Hannes Rotzinger; Alexey V. Ustinov; Martin Weides; Ioan M. Pop
sheet resistance and a kinetic inductance fraction close to unity, we measure a quality factor in the order of 700,000 at 20,mK. Furthermore, we observe a sheet resistance reduction by gentle heat treatment in air. This behaviour is exploited to study the kinetic inductance change using the microwave response of a coplanar wave guide resonator. We find the correlation between the kinetic inductance and the sheet resistance to be in good agreement with theoretical expectations.
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Sebastian T. Skacel; Ch. Kaiser; S. Wuensch; Hannes Rotzinger; A. Lukashenko; Markus Jerger; Georg Weiss; M. Siegel; Alexey V. Ustinov
This thesis is set in the framework of superconducting transmon-type qubit architectures with special focus on two important types of coupling between qubits and harmonic resonators: transverse and longitudinal coupling. We will see that longitudinal coupling offers some remarkable advantages with respect to scalability and readout. This thesis will focus on a design, which combines both these coupling types in a single circuit and provides the possibility to choose between pure transverse and pure longitudinal or have both at the same time. We will start with an introduction to circuit quantization, where we will explain how to describe and analyze superconducting electrical circuits in a systematic way and discuss which characteristic circuit elements make up qubits and resonators. We will then introduce the two types of coupling between qubit and resonator which are provided in our design. Translating this discussion from the Hamiltonian level to the language of circuit quantization, we will show how to design circuits with specifically tailored couplings. We will focus on our circuit design that consists of an inductively shunted transmon qubit with tunable coupling to an embedded harmonic mode. The distinctive feature of the tunable design is that the transverse coupling disappears when the longitudinal is maximal and vice versa. Subsequently, we will turn to the implementation of our circuit design, discuss how to choose the parameters, and present an adapted alternative circuit, where coupling strength and anharmonicity scale better than in the original circuit. In addition, we present a proposal for an experimental device that will serve as a prototype for a first experiment. We will conclude the thesis discussing different possibilities to do readout with our circuit design, including a short discussion of the influence of dissipation.
Nature Physics | 2018
S. E. de Graaf; Sebastian T. Skacel; T. Hönigl-Decrinis; R. Shaikhaidarov; Hannes Rotzinger; Sven Linzen; Mario Ziegler; Uwe Hübner; H.-G. Meyer; V. Antonov; E. Il’ichev; Alexey V. Ustinov; A. Ya. Tzalenchuk; Oleg V. Astafiev
We present an argon ion beam milling process to remove the native oxide layer forming on aluminum thin films due to their exposure to atmosphere in between lithographic steps. Our cleaning process is readily integrable with conventional fabrication of Josephson junction quantum circuits. From measurements of the internal quality factors of superconducting microwave resonators with and without contacts, we place an upper bound on the residual resistance of an ion beam milled contact of 50 mΩ μm2 at a frequency of 4.5u2009GHz. Resonators for which only 6% of the total foot-print was exposed to the ion beam milling, in areas of low electric and high magnetic fields, showed quality factors above 106 in the single photon regime, and no degradation compared to single layer samples. We believe these results will enable the development of increasingly complex superconducting circuits for quantum information processing.
Physical Review Letters | 2018
Lukas Grünhaupt; Nataliya Maleeva; Sebastian T. Skacel; M. Calvo; Florence Levy-Bertrand; Alexey V. Ustinov; Hannes Rotzinger; Alessandro Monfardini; Gianluigi Catelani; Ioan M. Pop
We have investigated dielectric losses in amorphous silicon oxide (a-SiO) thin films under operating conditions of superconducting qubits (mK temperatures and low microwave powers). For this purpose, we have developed a broadband measurement setup employing multiplexed lumped element resonators using a broadband power combiner and a low-noise amplifier. The measured temperature and power dependences of the dielectric losses are in good agreement with those predicted for atomic two-level tunneling systems (TLS). By measuring the losses at different frequencies, we found that the TLS density of states is energy dependent. This had not been seen previously in loss measurements. These results contribute to a better understanding of decoherence effects in superconducting qubits and suggest a possibility to minimize TLS-related decoherence by reducing the qubit operation frequency.
arXiv: Superconductivity | 2014
Sebastian T. Skacel; Ch. Kaiser; S. Wuensch; Hannes Rotzinger; A. Lukashenko; Markus Jerger; Georg Weiss; M. Siegel; Alexey V. Ustinov
arXiv: Superconductivity | 2018
Lukas Grünhaupt; Martin Spiecker; Daria Gusenkova; Nataliya Maleeva; Sebastian T. Skacel; Ivan Takmakov; Francesco Valenti; Patrick Winkel; Hannes Rotzinger; Alexey V. Ustinov; Ioan M. Pop
arXiv: Superconductivity | 2018
Lukas Grünhaupt; Nataliya Maleeva; Sebastian T. Skacel; M. Calvo; Florence Levy-Bertrand; Alexey V. Ustinov; Hannes Rotzinger; Alessandro Monfardini; Gianluigi Catelani; Ioan M. Pop