Characterization of Quality Factors of Superconducting Resonators
Author
Chaudhary, Shubham
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Superconducting lumped element resonators play a pivotal role in circuit
quantum electrodynamics (cQED) architectures, serving both as protective
filters that isolate qubits from environmental noise and as sensitive
probes for qubit state readout. The performance of these resonators is
fundamentally limited by various loss mechanisms that arise during device
fabrication and operation. Among these, dielectric loss due to parasitic
two-level systems (TLSs) residing in native oxides or dielectric layers on
metal and substrate surfaces is a major source of decoherence at low powers.
These losses are highly dependent on device geometry, fabrication techniques, material quality, and substrate-metal interfaces.
In this project, I designed and fabricated lumped element resonators
with a focus on achieving high internal quality factors (Qi). A total of
four devices were fabricated using superconducting thin films and standard
lithographic techniques. Each device underwent systematic optimisation
of its fabrication recipe to reduce sources of loss and improve performance.
Through careful design, materials selection, and fabrication process refinement,
the project demonstrates pathways to enhance resonator quality and
coherence, contributing to the development of more robust superconducting
quantum circuits.

