Engineering perfect superconducting qubits

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Southampton
4 months ago
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Supervisors

Dr Dikai Guan


Dr Bruce (Jun-Yu) Ou


Project Description

This project, within the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Quantum Technology Engineering at the University of Southampton (https://qte.ac.uk), carries a UKRI TechExpert enhanced annual stipend around £31k for UK students. While researching the project outlined below you will also receive substantial training in scientific, technical, and commercial skills.


Superconducting qubits power today’s quantum computers, yet their fragile performance is limited by tiny material flaws. This project engineers the atomic-scale microstructure of Josephson junctions—optimising grain orientation, stress, and interfaces—for longer-lived, reproducible qubits. Students will combine advanced thin-film growth, microscopy, and cryogenic testing to engineer “perfect” quantum hardware.


Superconducting qubits underpin today’s most advanced quantum computers, yet their performance is limited by material imperfections at the heart of their nonlinear element — the Josephson junction (JJ). Presently, most transmon qubits use Al/AlOx/Al junctions fabricated by double-angle shadow evaporation. While effective at the nanoscale, this approach faces critical challenges of qubit lifetime, inhomogeneous broadening from fabrication and precise interface control at the nanoscale. The UK National Quantum Strategy highlights materials and fabrication science as critical to achieving reproducible, manufacturable qubits. There is an urgent need to bring a materials-engineering approach — grain orientation, stress relaxation, micro-texture, interface bonding — to the superconducting JJ stack. This project aims to systematically engineer and optimise the multilayer materials microstructure of Josephson junctions for superconducting qubits, achieving low lifetime variation, controlled texture, reproducible critical current, and compatibility with scalable manufacturing processes.


Research objectives include:



  • Thin Film Nanostructure Control: Study Al, Nb, and NbN thin films; deposition rate, substrate temperature, and post-deposition annealing to tune grain size, orientation, nanoscale texture, and residual stress.
  • Barrier and Interface Engineering: Compare native thermal AlOx vs plasma vs Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) Al₂O₃ and explore epitaxial oxide barriers; characterise interfacial bonding, stoichiometry, and roughness.
  • Device-Level Validation: Fabricate test JJ arrays, resonators, and transmons; correlate qubit metrics (T₁, T₂, Ic spread) with measured microstructure and interface chemistry.
  • Design Rules and Process Map: Build deposition–microstructure–performance correlations to guide reproducible, scalable JJ fabrication.

Entry Requirements

Undergraduate degree (at least UK 2:1 honours degree, or international equivalent).


Closing Date

31 July 2026. International applicants must apply before 31 March 2026.


Funding

See funding notes below.


How to Apply

Please apply via the online portal and select:



  • Programme type: Research
  • Academic year: 2026/27
  • Full time or part time
  • Faculty: Engineering and Physical Sciences

Search for programme PhD Quantum Tech Eng. Please add the name of the supervisor in section 2 of the application.


Applications should include

  • Your CV (resumé)
  • 2 academic references
  • Degree transcripts/ certificates to date
  • English language qualification (if applicable)

We are committed to promoting equality, diversity, and inclusivity and give full consideration to applicants seeking part-time study. The University of Southampton takes personal circumstances into account, has onsite childcare facilities, is committed to sustainability and has been awarded the Platinum EcoAward.


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