Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Cryogenic setup for trapped ion quantum computing.

M. F. Brandl, M. Mourik, L. Postler, A. Nolf, Kirill Lakhmanskiy, R. Paiva, S. Möller, N. Daniilidis, Hartmut Häffner, V. Kaushal, T. Ruster, C. Warschburger, H. Kaufmann, U. Poschinger, Ferdinand Schmidt-Kaler, P. Schindler, T. Monz, Rainer Blatt·July 18, 2016·DOI: 10.1063/1.4966970
MedicinePhysicsMaterials Science

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

We report on the design of a cryogenic setup for trapped ion quantum computing containing a segmented surface electrode trap. The heat shield of our cryostat is designed to attenuate alternating magnetic field noise, resulting in 120 dB reduction of 50 Hz noise along the magnetic field axis. We combine this efficient magnetic shielding with high optical access required for single ion addressing as well as for efficient state detection by placing two lenses each with numerical aperture 0.23 inside the inner heat shield. The cryostat design incorporates vibration isolation to avoid decoherence of optical qubits due to the motion of the cryostat. We measure vibrations of the cryostat of less than ±20 nm over 2 s. In addition to the cryogenic apparatus, we describe the setup required for an operation with 40Ca+ and 88Sr+ ions. The instability of the laser manipulating the optical qubits in 40Ca+ is characterized by yielding a minimum of its Allan deviation of 2.4 ⋅ 10-15 at 0.33 s. To evaluate the performance of the apparatus, we trapped 40Ca+ ions, obtaining a heating rate of 2.14(16) phonons/s and a Gaussian decay of the Ramsey contrast with a 1/e-time of 18.2(8) ms.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.