Sub-kelvin thermal conductivity of substrates and on-chip routing in quantum integrated systems
Charles Bon-Mardion, Arnaud Lorin, Edouard Deschaseaux, C\'eline Feautrier, Daniel Mermin, Jean Charbonnier, Jing Li, Jean-Luc Sauvageot, Candice Thomas

TL;DR
This study investigates the sub-kelvin thermal conductivity of various substrates and on-chip routing in quantum systems, revealing substrate choice's critical role in thermal management at cryogenic temperatures.
Contribution
It provides experimental data on substrate thermal conductivities and phonon scattering mechanisms, and assesses on-chip routing effects on thermal conductance in quantum architectures.
Findings
High-resistivity silicon has the highest thermal conductivity at 300 mK.
On-chip superconducting Nb routing lines increase in-plane thermal conductance.
Substrate remains the dominant heat path despite routing-induced conductance increases.
Abstract
The development of large-scale quantum systems increasingly relies on the close integration of heterogeneous components such as qubits, control electronics, and readout circuits, making thermal management at cryogenic temperatures a central challenge in such architectures. In this work, we present an experimental thermal study of two building blocks of such systems: the substrate and the on-chip routing. We first investigate the sub-kelvin thermal conductivity of four substrate materials: high-resistivity silicon, low-resistivity silicon, borosilicate, and sapphire. We report that high-resistivity silicon exhibits the highest thermal conductivity among the substrates studied (~W/mK at 300~mK), while low-resistivity silicon, borosilicate, and sapphire show lower values (~W/mK, 2~W/mK, and 2~W/mK at…
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