Indium Tin Oxide: A Superconducting Material Enabling Quantum Readouts

Outcome/Accomplishment

Researchers developed superconductors that, with an ultra-low thermal footprint, were able to read the data carried in qubits, the data packets of quantum networking. The experiments were conducted at the Center for Quantum Networks (CQN), an NSF-funded Engineering Research Center (ERC) based at the University of Arizona.

Impact/Benefits

The researchers have shown that the integration of superconducting electronics and quantum photonics can achieve efficient transduction and readout of qubits. That's a key step toward readouts that are fast, accurate, and performed using hardware that facilitates high qubit connectivity.

Explanation/Background

The material used by the CQN researchers, indium tin oxide (ITO), is a transparent semiconductor that can behave as a superconductor. Prior work has shown that commercially available ITO can be electrochemically reduced, permitting superconductivity.

CQN is a full-stack quantum networking program that brings together experts with diverse backgrounds to develop theoretical research and critical components in the entire stack of device and subsystem technologies to realize the vision of a scalable quantum Internet. CQN's research focus is on building a quantum communication infrastructure supported by fault-tolerant quantum repeaters and routers.

Image

Location

Tucson, Arizona

e-mail

info@cqn-erc.org

Start Year

Microelectronics and IT

Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon
Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon

Microelectronics, Sensing, and IT

Lead Institution

University of Arizona

Core Partners

Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University

Fact Sheet

Image

Outcome/Accomplishment

Researchers developed superconductors that, with an ultra-low thermal footprint, were able to read the data carried in qubits, the data packets of quantum networking. The experiments were conducted at the Center for Quantum Networks (CQN), an NSF-funded Engineering Research Center (ERC) based at the University of Arizona.

Location

Tucson, Arizona

e-mail

info@cqn-erc.org

Start Year

Microelectronics and IT

Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon
Microelectronics, Sensing, and Information Technology Icon

Microelectronics, Sensing, and IT

Lead Institution

University of Arizona

Core Partners

Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University

Fact Sheet

Impact/benefits

The researchers have shown that the integration of superconducting electronics and quantum photonics can achieve efficient transduction and readout of qubits. That's a key step toward readouts that are fast, accurate, and performed using hardware that facilitates high qubit connectivity.

Explanation/Background

The material used by the CQN researchers, indium tin oxide (ITO), is a transparent semiconductor that can behave as a superconductor. Prior work has shown that commercially available ITO can be electrochemically reduced, permitting superconductivity.

CQN is a full-stack quantum networking program that brings together experts with diverse backgrounds to develop theoretical research and critical components in the entire stack of device and subsystem technologies to realize the vision of a scalable quantum Internet. CQN's research focus is on building a quantum communication infrastructure supported by fault-tolerant quantum repeaters and routers.