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On-chip microwave sensing of quasiparticles in tantalum superconducting circuits on silicon for scalable quantum technologies

Published: September 9, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2509.07669v1

By: Shima Poorgholam-Khanjari , Paniz Foshat , Mingqi Zhang and more

Potential Business Impact:

Finds tiny energy bits that slow down quantum computers.

Business Areas:
Semiconductor Hardware, Science and Engineering

The performance and scalability of superconducting quantum circuits are fundamentally constrained by non-equilibrium quasiparticles, which induce microwave losses that limit resonator quality factors and qubit coherence times. Understanding and mitigating these excitations is therefore central to advancing scalable quantum technologies. Here, we demonstrate on-chip microwave sensing of quasiparticles in high-Q {\alpha}-tantalum coplanar waveguide resonators on silicon, operated in the single-photon regime. Temperature-dependent measurements reveal persistent non-equilibrium quasiparticles at millikelvin temperatures, producing a measurable suppression of the internal quality factor (Qi) relative to theoretical expectations. By benchmarking across materials, we find that the quasiparticle density in {\alpha}-Ta is approximately one-third that of NbN at equivalent normalised temperatures (T/Tc), directly correlating with reduced microwave loss. Our methodology establishes a scalable platform for probing quasiparticle dynamics and points towards new routes for engineering superconducting circuits with improved coherence, with impact on qubit readout resonators, kinetic-inductance detectors, and emerging quantum processors and sensors.

Page Count
16 pages

Category
Physics:
Quantum Physics