Probing Micromotion in a Multi-Segmented Blade-Style Ion Trap
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Islam, Kazi Rajibul
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University of Waterloo
Abstract
Trapped ions are a leading candidate in quantum computing platforms. Their all-to-all
connectivity and high-fidelity multi-qubit interactions serve as an essential pillar for scaling
up quantum computing. Trapping linear chains of 171Yb+ ions has applications ranging
from digital quantum computation to analog quantum simulation of physically relevant
models. Whilst these applications seem attractive, many experimental challenges prevent
trapped ions from easily scaling up. The quadrupole multi-segmented blade-style trap
is a leading trap architecture for quantum simulation because of its deep and quadratic
confining potential, high optical access and capability to hold long chains of ions. Although,
blade-style traps face challenges such as complex electronics control and ion heating caused
by micromotion.
Blade-style traps are traditionally hand assembled, and therefore are prone to misalignment,
leading to increased levels of micromotion. This limitation causes many adverse
effects, all negatively contributing to the quality of the quantum simulations performable
with the blade-style trap.
In this thesis, I will describe my work in building the electronic infrastructure to confine
long chains of 171Yb+ ions in a multi-segmented blade-style trap. The bulk of my work
will focus on probing micromotion in the trap by using a repump transition with a narrow
enough linewidth. I will first present some background on ion dynamics, micromotion and
fundamentals of ion trapping. Afterwards, I will discuss the multi-segmented blade-style
trap used in this work, along with the electronics that I designed to drive the confining
electromagnetic fields. A novel approach of using a balanced radio-frequency drive along
with completely out-of-vacuum electronics allows us to reach high secular frequencies. Using
this approach, we demonstrate long chains of up to 25 ions with qubit phase coherence
exceeding 0.9 s, demonstrating good control over the magnetic field level. The rest of the
thesis will present our approach to probe and minimize micromotion in the segmented
blade-style trap. Here, I will demonstrate that our results show inherently low micromotion
without any compensation fields, indicating that the assembly of the blades is quite
optimal. Displacements below 1 μm are required radially to find the micromotion null.
Additionally, I will demonstrate that there is low micromotion at the center and edge of a
long chain of ions, showing that for large-scale quantum simulations, we can expect low axial
and radial micromotion across a long chain of up to 25 ions. These results demonstrate
that hand-assembled blade-style traps can exhibit inherently low excess micromotion, such
that the inherent micromotion is at the limit of resolvability for the sideband spectroscopic
method. This work will is crucial for obtaining low micromotion for when we eventually
run large-scale quantum simulations in this trap.