Ultra-low vibration closed-cycle cryogenic surface-electrode ion trap apparatus

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Dubielzig, Timko: Ultra-low vibration closed-cycle cryogenic surface-electrode ion trap apparatus. Hannover : Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität, Diss., 2021, v, 155 S. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15488/11476

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Trapped ions are one of the leading platforms for building scalable quantum information processors. Current ion traps run on less than 100 qubits. A useful quantum computer needs to operate thousands or even millions of qubits. If systems reach gate fidelities that allow for quantum error correction, gate errors below the physical fidelity can be reached, which is important for scaling. The most promising platform for scaling up ion-based quantum computers are surface electrode traps in connection with the so-called QCCD (Quantum Charge Coupled Device) architecture. In an evolution of the standard (laser-based) approach to quantum logic gates, gates can be performed by applying an oscillating magnetic near-field gradient to the ions. Current fidelities are about one order of magnitude away from reaching the fault tolerant threshold with no fundamental limitations in sight.Scaling QCCDs is impeded by heating rates of the ions as well as vacuum quality. Ions have to be stored for at least as long as it takes for an algorithm to run and subsequent readout. Collisions with background gas and heating can expel ions from the trap. The microwave near-field approach of driving gates benefits from ions that are trapped close to the trap surface. Unfortunately, heating becomes more prominent near the surface.A cryogenic environment reduces the background pressure by several orders of magnitude and the kinetic energy of gas molecules by two orders of magnitude. Heating rates in a cryogenic trap are about two orders of magnitude lower than in a room temperature trap with otherwise equal physical properties. To operate a QCCD processor, it is required to employ phase-stable Raman laser beams. The cryogenic design of the apparatus needs to take into account the resulting requirements for ultra-low vibration amplitudes. This is particularly relevant for closed-cycle cooling systems, which are desirable from an economic point of view compared to liquid cryostats that boil off helium, but which also feature moving mechanical parts that can introduce a serious amount of vibrations.Here, we present a vibration isolated closed cycle Gifford-McMahon cryocooler with record low vibration amplitudes of 29 nm (RMS=7.8 nm) in the vertical and 51 nm (RMS=13.5 nm) in the horizontal direction. It contains a self-sustained inner vacuum chamber that houses the trap. It features 100 DC connections, 10 of which are able to carry up to 1 A of current and 8 high frequency lines. At 5 K, we can apply continuous 3.4 W of microwave power continuously at 1 GHz to the trap electrodes without heating the system. This is about 5.8 times more than state of the art near-field gates require. We also present the laser systems required to for single-shot ablation loading and Doppler cooling of Be ions: a 70 mW 313 nm Dopper cooling laser, a 1064 nm ns-pulse laser for ablation of neutral beryllium atoms and a 235 nm laser for ionizing them. The detection system features an in vacuum imaging system on a cryogenic 3D translation stage that is able to scan and image the complete surface of an ion trap. The light can be detected on a photomultiplier tube or spatially resolved on an EMCCD camera. Our trap features a meander structure for driving gates and can trap up to 5 ions of which we, so far, did not lose any due to background gas collisions. This hints at a vacuum pressure of 1e-12 mbar or lower. The demonstrated system could hold a cryogenic QCCD chip with a few 10 qubits
Lizenzbestimmungen: CC BY 3.0 DE
Publikationstyp: DoctoralThesis
Publikationsstatus: publishedVersion
Erstveröffentlichung: 2021
Die Publikation erscheint in Sammlung(en):Fakultät für Mathematik und Physik
Dissertationen

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