Stephen A. Lyon’s research while affiliated with Princeton University and other places

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Publications (58)


Fig. 1 SEM images of a device identical to the one used in the experiment and a cartoon mock-up of the channel profile. (a) Wide-field view of one of the six CCD arrays connecting the large electron reservoir (left) to the Twiddle-Sense region (right). (b-d) Zoomed in SEM images of each region with gate labels. The gates in the central part, (c), are connected as a 3-phase CCD where each CCD phase is labeled as ϕ i . Each region is segmented by separately controlled Door gates labeled Dr i . Gates with identical labels are controlled with the same voltage source. Note in (d) the channel widens from 3 µm to 4 µm to reduce screening of underlying gates by the top gate, while Dr 6 is always kept negative to keep electrons from other parts of the device that are not relevant to this experiment.
Fig. 2 (a) Schematic of the cryogenic amplifier circuit showing component values, biasing scheme, and DC coupling to device. (b) The roll-off frequency of the amplifier circuit when driven through the 1.1 MΩ resistor. This frequency is used to estimate the parasitic capacitance of the circuit and the expected measured voltage signal from a single electron.
Fig. 5 (a) FEM simulation of the electric field profile around the electron reservoir door gates for a single channel. Gates are set to the following voltages: V ST = 0 V, V Dr 1 = V Dr 2 = +0.5 V, V Dr 3 = -0.7 V, V T M = -1 V. The voltage at the position of the electron is approximately 47% of what is set on the underlying gate electrodes. (b) Electron loading from the electron reservoir to the TwiddleSense gates as a function of the Door 1 and Door 2 voltages, with the electron reservoir held at 0 V.
Sensing Few Electrons Floating on Helium with High-Electron-Mobility Transistors
  • Preprint
  • File available

December 2024

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6 Reads

Mayer M. Feldman

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Gordian Fuchs

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Tiffany Liu

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[...]

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Stephen A. Lyon

We report on low-frequency measurements of few electrons floating on superfluid helium using a bespoke cryogenic cascode amplifier circuit built with off-the-shelf GaAs High-Electron-Mobility Transistors (HEMTs). We integrate this circuit with a Charge-Coupled Device (CCD) to transport the electrons on helium and characterize its performance. We show that this circuit has a Signal-to-Noise ratio (SNR) of \thicksim 2eHz\frac{e}{\sqrt{Hz}} at 102 kHz, an order of magnitude improvement from previous implementations and provides a compelling alternative to few electron sensing with high frequency resonators.

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Disentangling Losses in Tantalum Superconducting Circuits

October 2023

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167 Reads

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73 Citations

Physical Review X

Superconducting qubits are a leading system for realizing large-scale quantum processors, but overall gate fidelities suffer from coherence times limited by microwave dielectric loss. Recently discovered tantalum-based qubits exhibit record lifetimes exceeding 0.3 ms. Here, we perform systematic, detailed measurements of superconducting tantalum resonators in order to disentangle sources of loss that limit state-of-the-art tantalum devices. By studying the dependence of loss on temperature, microwave photon number, and device geometry, we quantify materials-related losses and observe that the losses are dominated by several types of saturable two-level systems (TLSs), with evidence that both surface and bulk related TLSs contribute to loss. Moreover, we show that surface TLSs can be altered with chemical processing. With four different surface conditions, we quantitatively extract the linear absorption associated with different surface TLS sources. Finally, we quantify the impact of the chemical processing at single-photon powers, the relevant conditions for qubit device performance. In this regime, we measure resonators with internal quality factors ranging from 5 to 15×106, comparable to the best qubits reported. In these devices, the surface and bulk TLS contributions to loss are comparable, showing that systematic improvements in materials on both fronts are necessary to improve qubit coherence further.


a) High angle annular dark field scanning transmission electron microscope image of the cross‐section of a tantalum film on sapphire. The tantalum film has a BCC crystal structure and was grown in the (111) orientation on a c‐plane sapphire substrate. An amorphous oxide layer can be seen on top of the tantalum at the tantalum air interface. b) Experimental results of the tantalum binding energy spectrum obtained from X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) performed using 760 eV incident photon energy. Each oxidation state of tantalum contributes a pair of peaks to the spectrum due to spin‐orbit splitting. At the highest binding energy (26–30 eV), there is a pair of peaks corresponding to the Ta5 + state. At the lowest binding energy, we see a pair of sharp asymmetric peaks corresponding to metallic tantalum (21–25 eV). c) Schematic explaining the physics behind variable energy X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (VEXPS). The red and blue dots correspond to photoelectrons excited from a surface oxidation state and bulk oxidation state of the tantalum films respectively. When low energy X‐rays are incident on the film surface, photoelectrons are excited with low kinetic energy (depicted by a small tail on the dots). These low energy photoelectrons have a shorter mean free path so that only those emitted from the surface species (colored red) will exit the material and impinge on the detector. When high energy X‐rays are incident on the film surface, photoelectrons with high kinetic energy are excited (depicted by a longer tail on the dots). These higher energy photoelectrons have comparatively longer mean free paths so that electrons from the bulk of the film will exit the material alongside electrons from the surface. In our experiment, the angle between the surface and the incident X‐rays varies between 6° and 10°; the X‐rays in this image are shown at a steeper angle for legibility.
Shirley background corrected XPS spectra of Ta4f binding energy obtained at three different incident photon energies. Left panel: with 760 eV X‐ray photons, the Ta5 + peaks dominate over the Ta⁰ peaks. Middle panel: at 2200 eV photon energy, there is almost equal contribution of photoelectrons at Ta⁰ and Ta5 +. Right panel: At 5000 eV photon energy, the dominant photoelectron contribution is coming from Ta⁰. In all three plots there is non‐zero intensity between the Ta5 + and metallic tantalum peaks, indicating minority tantalum oxidation states. The complete set of data and fits corresponding to all 17 incident X‐ray energies is shown in Section S3.3 (Supporting Information). The data are fit with Gaussian profiles for the Ta5 +, Ta3 +, and Ta1 + species, and skewed Voigt profiles for the Ta⁰ and Taint0$^{0}_{\text{int}}$. Included in the fit is also a Gaussian profile corresponding to the O2s peak; the amplitude of this peak is fixed to 5% of the measured O1s peak intensity.
a) Relative photoelectron fraction for the different tantalum oxidation states as a function of incident X‐ray photon energy. The dots are experimental data extracted from fitting Ta4f spectra at different incident X‐ray energies. Solid lines represent an iterative fit to the data using Equations 1 and 2, corresponding to the expected intensity fractions from the depth profile shown in Figure 4a. b) Close up view of relative photoelectron fraction contribution of Ta3 +, Ta1 +, and Taint0$^{0}_{\text{int}}$. The rise, plateau, and fall of the photoelectron intensity fractions with X‐ray energy indicate that these three species are localized at a buried interface.
Extracted chemical profiles for three different samples: a) native b) BOE treated and c) triacid treated. Fitted photoelectron intensity fractions are shown in Section S4.6 (Supporting Information).
Chemical Profiles of the Oxides on Tantalum in State of the Art Superconducting Circuits

May 2023

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129 Reads

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31 Citations

Over the past decades, superconducting qubits have emerged as one of the leading hardware platforms for realizing a quantum processor. Consequently, researchers have made significant effort to understand the loss channels that limit the coherence times of superconducting qubits. A major source of loss has been attributed to two level systems that are present at the material interfaces. It is recently shown that replacing the metal in the capacitor of a transmon with tantalum yields record relaxation and coherence times for superconducting qubits, motivating a detailed study of the tantalum surface. In this work, the chemical profile of the surface of tantalum films grown on c‐plane sapphire using variable energy X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy (VEXPS) is studied. The different oxidation states of tantalum that are present in the native oxide resulting from exposure to air are identified, and their distribution through the depth of the film is measured. Furthermore, it is shown how the volume and depth distribution of these tantalum oxidation states can be altered by various chemical treatments. Correlating these measurements with detailed measurements of quantum devices may elucidate the underlying microscopic sources of loss.


Disentangling Losses in Tantalum Superconducting Circuits

January 2023

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36 Reads

Superconducting qubits are a leading system for realizing large scale quantum processors, but overall gate fidelities suffer from coherence times limited by microwave dielectric loss. Recently discovered tantalum-based qubits exhibit record lifetimes exceeding 0.3 ms. Here we perform systematic, detailed measurements of superconducting tantalum resonators in order to disentangle sources of loss that limit state-of-the-art tantalum devices. By studying the dependence of loss on temperature, microwave photon number, and device geometry, we quantify materials-related losses and observe that the losses are dominated by several types of saturable two level systems (TLSs), with evidence that both surface and bulk related TLSs contribute to loss. Moreover, we show that surface TLSs can be altered with chemical processing. With four different surface conditions, we quantitatively extract the linear absorption associated with different surface TLS sources. Finally, we quantify the impact of the chemical processing at single photon powers, the relevant conditions for qubit device performance. In this regime we measure resonators with internal quality factors ranging from 5 to 15 x 10^6, comparable to the best qubits reported. In these devices the surface and bulk TLS contributions to loss are comparable, showing that systematic improvements in materials on both fronts will be necessary to improve qubit coherence further.


Chemical profiles of the oxides on tantalum in state of the art superconducting circuits

January 2023

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33 Reads

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1 Citation

Over the past decades, superconducting qubits have emerged as one of the leading hardware platforms for realizing a quantum processor. Consequently, researchers have made significant effort to understand the loss channels that limit the coherence times of superconducting qubits. A major source of loss has been attributed to two level systems that are present at the material interfaces. We recently showed that replacing the metal in the capacitor of a transmon with tantalum yields record relaxation and coherence times for superconducting qubits, motivating a detailed study of the tantalum surface. In this work, we study the chemical profile of the surface of tantalum films grown on c-plane sapphire using variable energy X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (VEXPS). We identify the different oxidation states of tantalum that are present in the native oxide resulting from exposure to air, and we measure their distribution through the depth of the film. Furthermore, we show how the volume and depth distribution of these tantalum oxidation states can be altered by various chemical treatments. By correlating these measurements with detailed measurements of quantum devices, we can improve our understanding of the microscopic device losses.



Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance in Neutral Silicon Vacancy Centers in Diamond via Bound Exciton States

November 2020

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122 Reads

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72 Citations

Physical Review Letters

Neutral silicon vacancy (SiV0) centers in diamond are promising candidates for quantum networks because of their excellent optical properties and long spin coherence times. However, spin-dependent fluorescence in such defects has been elusive due to poor understanding of the excited state fine structure and limited off-resonant spin polarization. Here we report the realization of optically detected magnetic resonance and coherent control of SiV0 centers at cryogenic temperatures, enabled by efficient optical spin polarization via previously unreported higher-lying excited states. We assign these states as bound exciton states using group theory and density functional theory. These bound exciton states enable new control schemes for SiV0 as well as other emerging defect systems.


Optically detected magnetic resonance in the neutral silicon vacancy center in diamond via bound exciton states

April 2020

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323 Reads

Neutral silicon vacancy (SiV0) centers in diamond are promising candidates for quantum networks because they feature both excellent optical properties and long spin coherence times. However, spin-dependent fluorescence in such defects has been elusive. In contrast to nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers, the high Debye-Waller factor and correspondingly smaller phonon sideband make off-resonant spin polarization challenging, and optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) utilizing the zero phonon line is complicated by limited emission in the phonon sideband and poor understanding of the excited state fine structure. Here we report the realization of ODMR and coherent control of the SiV0 center, enabled by efficient optical spin polarization via higher-lying excited states. We assign these states to be bound exciton states of SiV0 by combining group theory and giant supercell density functional theory (DFT) calculations. These higher-lying states enable efficient optical excitation and spin polarization for SiV0 and provide new possibilities for controlling SiV0 as well as other similar defect systems.



Narrow Optical Line Widths in Erbium Implanted in TiO2

November 2019

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39 Reads

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59 Citations

Nano Letters

Atomic and atom-like defects in the solid-state are widely explored for quantum computers, networks and sensors. Rare earth ions are an attractive class of atomic defects that feature narrow spin and optical transitions that are isolated from the host crystal, allowing incorporation into a wide range of materials. However, the realization of long electronic spin coherence times is hampered by magnetic noise from abundant nuclear spins in the most widely studied host crystals. Here, we demonstrate that Er3+ ions can be introduced via ion implantation into TiO2, a host crystal that has not been studied extensively for rare earth ions and has a low natural abundance of nuclear spins. We observe efficient incorporation of the implanted Er3+ into the Ti4+ site (> 50% yield), and measure narrow inhomogeneous spin and optical linewidths (20 and 460 MHz, respectively) that are comparable to bulk-doped crystalline hosts for Er3+. This work demonstrates that ion implantation is a viable path to studying rare earth ions in new hosts, and is a significant step towards realizing individually addressed rare earth ions with long spin coherence times for quantum technologies.


Citations (23)


... This type of microwave resonators offers a genuine single-mode behavior along with a small physical footprint. The internal quality factors of state-of-the-art lumped-element resonators can exceed 10 6 [45][46][47]. The resonators are bridged by a nonlinear coupler-either an asymmetric dc SQUID or its double-loop extension BiSQUID (see the details in Sec. ...

Reference:

Detector of microwave photon pairs based on a Josephson photomultiplier
Disentangling Losses in Tantalum Superconducting Circuits

Physical Review X

... Tantalum (Ta) and its alloys are widely used in engineering applications, such as semiconductor integrated circuits [1][2][3], biomedical implants [4][5][6][7][8], and protective hard coatings [9,10]. These materials exhibit excellent mechanical strength, wear resistance, diffusion barrier, and biocompatibility. ...

Chemical Profiles of the Oxides on Tantalum in State of the Art Superconducting Circuits

... There is substantial evidence for the importance of dielectric dissipation and fluctuations at accidental two-level systems (TLS), predominantly at interfaces and surfaces, encouraging the development of cleaner and more ordered insulator/superconductor material systems [1-6, 25, 38, 49, 51-57]. An exciting recent success story is the fabrication of qubits with α-Tantalum as the superconductor, leading to improved coherence times and large q-factors [56,58,58,59,[59][60][61][62]. This improvement was believed to be linked to a more favorable chemistry of oxygen accommodation in Ta [60,63,64]. ...

Chemical profiles of the oxides on tantalum in state of the art superconducting circuits

... SiV (0) centres are characterized by a triplet 3 A 2g ground state and two excited triplet states 3 A 2u and 3 E u that yield lines in the PL spectrum [42]. It has been shown that excitation into higher excited states leads to a significant spin polarization that enables ODMR measurements using SiV (0) centres [43]. Negatively charged SiV (−) states, on the other hand, are characterized by a doublet 2 E g ground state and an excited 2 E u state. ...

Optically Detected Magnetic Resonance in Neutral Silicon Vacancy Centers in Diamond via Bound Exciton States
  • Citing Article
  • November 2020

Physical Review Letters

... Interactions between the Er 3þ dopant and its host are subtle; yet, these interactions are fundamental to our understanding of atomic defects in the solid state. Er 3þ ions have been explored for quantum information applications across a wide range of materials and coordination environments, such as yttrium-based crystals, 14,15 MgO, 16 TiO 2 ,3,4,17 ZnS, PbWO 4 , MoO 3 , and ZnO. 1 Though the host material is often depicted as a passive environment for the Er 3þ dopant, it can also serve as a resource to provide additional methods of controlling the qubit. From a materials design perspective, this motivates exploration of host materials with additional controllable degrees of freedom (e.g., strain or polarization) to systematically study the dependence of Er 3þ on its local environment. ...

Narrow Optical Line Widths in Erbium Implanted in TiO2
  • Citing Article
  • November 2019

Nano Letters

... Donor bound excitons (D 0 X) in silicon have been studied as a promising pathway to the opto-electronic readout of donors spins, thanks to their narrow optical transitions with homogeneous linewidths as low as 20 neV [14,15]. Spin-selective optical generation of the D 0 X, followed by Auger recombination [16] yielding D 0 → D + provides an effective method for donor spin-to-charge conversion, which has been demonstrated in isotopically purified silicon [17][18][19]. However, donor bound exciton transitions are sensitive to strain due to the conduction band valley orbit [20] and valence band Pikus-Bir interactions [21], yielding line shifts, splitting and broadening. ...

Electron Spin Resonance of P Donors in Isotopically Purified Si Detected by Contactless Photoconductivity
  • Citing Article
  • May 2019

Physical Review Applied

... Non-exponential inversion recovery curves are observed in many systems and have been attributed to inhomogeneity, anisotropy, and native defects in combination with spectral diffusion. [53][54][55] The slower decaying term in the biexponential is expected to be more representative of an isolated Na guest and places a lower bound on the intrinsic value of T 1 . 56 A close inspection of the fits shows that this biexponential form still does not completely describe the decay, which could be an indication of multiple relaxation times at work. ...

Strongly Anisotropic Spin Relaxation in the Neutral Silicon Vacancy Center in Diamond

... However, as the spin flip-flop rate decreases with the sixth power of the distance between ER-ions, we estimate its contribution to be small. In fact, if we extrapolate results from [27] to an approximate Er-doping concentration of 3.6×10 19 cm −3 (or 0.2%), we find a flip-flop rate of a few Hz -by far to little to explain the AFC background. ...

Measuring electron spin flip-flops through nuclear spin echo decays

... While a number of physical systems show promise in meeting these requirements [34,46,47], we have chosen to explore the implementation and spin dynamics of the protocol in a system offering experimental convenience and flexibility at the cost of the availability of projective measurement. ...

All-electric control of donor nuclear spin qubits in silicon
  • Citing Article
  • August 2017

Nature Nanotechnology

... As shown in Figure 8, the optical properties of SiV show an extremely narrow spectral line width (~ 0.1 nm) when measured at low temperatures, and most of the emission is concentrated on the ZPL, accounting for about 90%. The excited state lifetime measurement using Hanbury Brown -Twiss in Figure 4b shows that the excited state lifetime of the SiV 0 center is about 1.8 ns, indicating that it has application value in quantum storage and quantum computing [74]. The fluorescence lifetime of the NV center shows certain changes under different conditions. ...

Observation of an environmentally insensitive solid state spin defect in diamond

Science