vdW-corrected density functional study of electric field noise heating in ion traps caused by electrode surface adsorbates
Keith G. Ray, Brenda M. Rubenstein, Wenze Gu, Vincenzo Lordi

TL;DR
This study uses advanced computational methods to analyze how specific surface adsorbates influence electric field noise in ion traps, revealing that chemical differences can cause significant variations in ion heating rates.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of how specific adsorbates affect electric field noise using first principles calculations, highlighting the importance of chemical specificity.
Findings
Adsorbate chemical identity can change noise by seven orders of magnitude.
Weakly-adsorbed hydrocarbons with soft in-plane modes produce the highest noise.
The fluctuating dipole model cannot fully explain the 1/ω noise frequency scaling.
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…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
