In thin superconducting wires, phase-slip by thermal activation near the critical temperature is a well-known effect. It has recently become clear that phase-slip by quantum tunnelling through the energy barrier can also have a significant rate at low temperatures. In this paper, it is suggested that quantum phase-slip can be used to realize a superconducting quantum bit without Josephson junctions. A loop containing very thin nanofabricated wire is biased with an externally applied magnetic flux of half a flux quantum, resulting in two states with opposite circulating current and equal energy. Quantum phase-slip should provide coherent coupling between these two macroscopic states. Numbers are given for a wire of amorphous niobium-silicon that can be fabricated with advanced electron beam lithography. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
CITATION STYLE
Mooij, J. E., & Harmans, C. J. P. M. (2005). Phase-slip flux qubits. New Journal of Physics, 7. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/7/1/219
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