Abstract

In order to realize the full potential of ion trap quantum computers, an improved understanding is required of the motional heating that trapped ions experience. Experimental studies of the temperature-, frequency-, and ion–electrode distance-dependence of the electric field noise responsible for motional heating, as well as the noise before and after ion bombardment cleaning of trap electrodes, suggest that fluctuations of adsorbate dipoles are a likely source of so-called ‘anomalous heating,’ or motional heating of the trapped ions at a rate much higher than the Johnson noise limit. Previous computational studies have investigated how the fluctuation of model adsorbate dipoles affects anomalous heating. However, the way in which specific adsorbates affect the electric field noise has not yet been examined, and an electric dipole model employed in previous studies is only accurate for a small subset of possible adsorbates. Here, we analyze the behavior of both in-plane and out-of-plane vibrational modes of twenty-one adsorbate–electrode combinations within the independent fluctuating dipole model, utilizing accurate first principles computational methods to determine the surface-induced dipole moments. We find the chemical specificity of the adsorbate can change the electric field noise by seven orders of magnitude and specifically that soft in-plane modes of weakly-adsorbed hydrocarbons produce the greatest noise and ion heating. We discuss the dynamics captured by the fluctuating dipole model, namely the adsorbate-dependent turn-on temperature and electric field noise magnitude, and also discuss the model’s failure to reproduce the measured 1/ω noise frequency scaling with a single adsorbate species. We suggest future research directions for improved, quantitatively predictive models based on extensions of the present framework to multiple interacting adsorbates.

Highlights

  • Due to their relative isolation, trapped ions allow unique access to the quantum world

  • We employed an independent fluctuating dipole model to explore the effects of a wide range of adsorbates on motional heating in ion traps

  • In order to better understand the limitations and applicability of this model, we strove to make the microscopic inputs into our implementation of the independent fluctuating dipole model as accurate as possible by relying on first principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the relevant parameters for a variety of realistic adsorbates

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Summary

Introduction

Due to their relative isolation, trapped ions allow unique access to the quantum world. In order to realize practical quantum computers, ion traps will need to be reduced in size.[8] Because heating rates scale as an inverse power of the ion–electrode distance, the ions in future architectures will be exposed to even greater noise as their distances from the electrodes are reduced. Developing strategies to minimize this noise will be essential to the development of ion trap quantum computers

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