Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Passive Components in Quantum Computing

    0603 Automotive Chip Varistors as TVS Diode Replacements, TDK Tech Note

    Miniaturization of MLCCs and Electrolytics, KAVX Tech Chat

    Exxelia Offers Custom Naval Transformers and Inductors

    Researchers Demonstrated 32nm Aluminum Vacuum Gap Capacitor

    Conductive Polymer Capacitor Market and Design‑In Guide to 2035

    TDK Releases High Performance 105C DC Link Film Capacitors

    YAGEO Offers Automotive MOVs for EV and AI power

    YAGEO Acquires 100% of Shares of Shibaura Electronics

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    One‑Pulse Characterization of Nonlinear Power Inductors

    Thermistor Linearization Challenges

    Coaxial Connectors and How to Connect with PCB

    PCB Manufacturing, Test Methods, Quality and Reliability

    Transformer Behavior – Current Transfer and Hidden Feedback

    Choosing the Right Capacitor: The Importance of Accurate Measurements

    RF Inductors: Selection and Design Challenges for High-Frequency Circuits

    Transformer Safety IEC 61558 Standard

    3-Phase EMI Filter Design, Simulation, Calculation and Test

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • PCNS
    • PCNS 2025
    • PCNS 2023
    • PCNS 2021
    • PCNS 2019
    • PCNS 2017
  • Events
  • Home
  • NewsFilter
    • All
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Antenna
    • Applications
    • Automotive
    • Capacitors
    • Circuit Protection Devices
    • electro-mechanical news
    • Filters
    • Fuses
    • Inductors
    • Industrial
    • Integrated Passives
    • inter-connect news
    • Market & Supply Chain
    • Market Insights
    • Medical
    • Modelling and Simulation
    • New Materials & Supply
    • New Technologies
    • Non-linear Passives
    • Oscillators
    • Passive Sensors News
    • Resistors
    • RF & Microwave
    • Telecommunication
    • Weekly Digest

    Passive Components in Quantum Computing

    0603 Automotive Chip Varistors as TVS Diode Replacements, TDK Tech Note

    Miniaturization of MLCCs and Electrolytics, KAVX Tech Chat

    Exxelia Offers Custom Naval Transformers and Inductors

    Researchers Demonstrated 32nm Aluminum Vacuum Gap Capacitor

    Conductive Polymer Capacitor Market and Design‑In Guide to 2035

    TDK Releases High Performance 105C DC Link Film Capacitors

    YAGEO Offers Automotive MOVs for EV and AI power

    YAGEO Acquires 100% of Shares of Shibaura Electronics

    Trending Tags

    • Ripple Current
    • RF
    • Leakage Current
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
    • Snubber
    • Low ESR
    • Feedthrough
    • Derating
    • Dielectric Constant
    • New Products
    • Market Reports
  • VideoFilter
    • All
    • Antenna videos
    • Capacitor videos
    • Circuit Protection Video
    • Filter videos
    • Fuse videos
    • Inductor videos
    • Inter-Connect Video
    • Non-linear passives videos
    • Oscillator videos
    • Passive sensors videos
    • Resistor videos

    One‑Pulse Characterization of Nonlinear Power Inductors

    Thermistor Linearization Challenges

    Coaxial Connectors and How to Connect with PCB

    PCB Manufacturing, Test Methods, Quality and Reliability

    Transformer Behavior – Current Transfer and Hidden Feedback

    Choosing the Right Capacitor: The Importance of Accurate Measurements

    RF Inductors: Selection and Design Challenges for High-Frequency Circuits

    Transformer Safety IEC 61558 Standard

    3-Phase EMI Filter Design, Simulation, Calculation and Test

    Trending Tags

    • Capacitors explained
    • Inductors explained
    • Resistors explained
    • Filters explained
    • Application Video Guidelines
    • EMC
    • New Products
    • Ripple Current
    • Simulation
    • Tantalum vs Ceramic
  • Knowledge Blog
  • Suppliers
    • Who is Who
  • PCNS
    • PCNS 2025
    • PCNS 2023
    • PCNS 2021
    • PCNS 2019
    • PCNS 2017
  • Events
No Result
View All Result
Passive Components Blog
No Result
View All Result

Passive Components in Quantum Computing

22.1.2026
Reading Time: 17 mins read
A A

Quantum computing pushes both interconnect and passive components into operating regimes far beyond conventional IT and industrial hardware. While qubits and cryogenic processors receive most of the attention, many system‑level performance limits are actually set by the passive components that shape power, bias, and RF signal paths across wide temperature ranges and extreme sensitivity to noise and magnetic fields. For designers and purchasers, a solid understanding of how resistors, capacitors, inductors, filters, and surge elements behave in this environment is essential for building scalable, reliable quantum platforms.

Quantum computing as an extreme environment

Modern quantum computers combine a cryogenic core, often operating around a few kelvin or below, with room‑temperature control electronics and high‑speed data connections. Passives span this entire stack, from rack‑level power filters through cryostat feedthroughs to components mounted close to the qubit package.

RelatedPosts

0603 Automotive Chip Varistors as TVS Diode Replacements, TDK Tech Note

Miniaturization of MLCCs and Electrolytics, KAVX Tech Chat

Exxelia Offers Custom Naval Transformers and Inductors

Key environmental challenges include:

  • Very wide temperature gradients, with repeated cycling between room temperature and cryogenic conditions.
  • Extremely tight noise budgets, where even small parasitics or loss in a passive element can degrade gate fidelity or readout accuracy.
  • High sensitivity to stray magnetic fields and to mechanical stress around qubits and RF resonators.

Studies of cryogenic power and control electronics confirm that conventional assumptions about component behavior at low temperature often no longer hold, making characterization and device choice critical even for seemingly simple parts such as 0.1 µF ceramic capacitors or thin‑film resistors.

Key roles of passive components

Passive components in quantum computing support and stabilize the “classical” electronics that prepare, control, and read out qubit states. Typical roles include:

  • Power integrity:
    • Bulk capacitors and filters in AC/DC front ends for racks and cryostat infrastructure.
    • Local decoupling networks around DACs, ADCs, FPGAs, RF sources, and cryogenic amplifiers.
    • Surge protection and inrush limiting for sensitive, low‑temperature hardware.
  • Signal fidelity:
    • Precision resistors and terminations preserving impedance and minimizing reflection on microwave control and readout lines.
    • Bias networks, attenuators, and filters that shape RF spectra reaching the qubit stage.
    • EMI filters at cryostat interfaces and on I/O lines.
  • Environmental mitigation:
    • Non‑magnetic passives and mechanical hardware near qubits.
    • Components with stable behavior under vacuum, low temperature, and mechanical vibration.

In many architectures, the same passive technologies used in cryogenic power electronics or RF metrology labs are repurposed or adapted for quantum computing, with additional constraints on magnetism and integration density.

Materials, magnetism, and cryogenic behavior

Magnetic cleanliness

Many qubit technologies (for example, trapped ions and certain superconducting qubits) require highly controlled magnetic fields. Even seemingly benign ferromagnetic parts can disturb local fields or introduce noise. Experimental work in trapped‑ion platforms, for example, explicitly calls out the use of non‑magnetic mica or NP0 capacitors for RF shunting near ion traps, precisely to reduce magnetic interference.

For passive component selection, this often translates into:

  • Preference for non‑magnetic terminations and lead frames in capacitors and resistors.
  • Avoidance of ferromagnetic hardware (screws, brackets, shields) close to resonators and qubits.
  • Careful review of inductor and transformer core materials; in the coldest regions, designers frequently avoid ferrite‑core components altogether.

Where vendors specify “non‑magnetic” versions or publish magnetic characterization data, those lines are natural candidates for the quantum bill of materials.

Dielectrics and conductor materials

Multiple independent reviews of cryogenic electronics and power components show that some passive technologies are inherently better suited for low‑temperature operation than others. Broad trends include:

  • Capacitors:
    • NP0/C0G ceramic capacitors: Very stable capacitance, low loss, and predictable behavior down to cryogenic temperatures, making them suitable for RF shunting and precision timing in quantum setups.
    • Film capacitors (polypropylene, PTFE): Low dissipation factor and good cryogenic performance, useful in filters and energy storage where size allows.
    • High‑k ceramics: Useful for dense decoupling at warmer stages, but their strong voltage and temperature coefficients make them less attractive in precision or cryogenic roles unless specifically characterized.
  • Resistors:
    • Thin‑film and metal‑film resistors: Low noise, tight tolerance, and favorable temperature coefficients over a broad range, making them candidates for precision bias networks and readout circuits in cryogenic environments.
    • Wirewound resistors: Electrically robust with good low‑temperature behavior for power paths, but inductance and potential magnetic effects can limit suitability near sensitive RF or qubit circuits.
  • Inductors and magnetics:
    • Nanocrystalline and amorphous magnetic cores have been identified as promising for cryogenically cooled power converters, but their use near qubits is constrained by magnetic field tolerance.
    • Air‑core inductors avoid core losses and magnetism but consume more PCB area; they are often used where RF purity and low distortion matter more than size.

In all cases, behavior below standard industrial or military temperature ranges should be treated as “according to manufacturer datasheet” or dedicated cryogenic characterization, rather than extrapolated from room‑temperature values.

Signal integrity when margins are tiny

Quantum control lines and readout paths routinely operate at microwave frequencies with stringent requirements on amplitude, phase noise, and scattering parameters. Passives are part of a continuous RF channel that includes connectors, cables, and on‑board structures.

Important selection criteria for these passives include:

  • Impedance control:
    • Termination resistors must maintain nominal value and low parasitic inductance/capacitance across the relevant frequency band to avoid reflection.
    • Bias tees and matching networks must be designed using RF models rather than simple DC parameters.
  • Loss and Q‑factor:
    • Capacitors and inductors in resonant or filtering roles require low ESR and low dissipation factor to avoid degrading Q‑factors and increasing insertion loss.
    • Attenuators and coaxial components used in cryogenic RF metrology environments provide useful benchmarks for achievable performance in quantum setups.
  • Packaging:
    • Component body size and lead configuration directly affect parasitics. RF‑optimized chip and coaxial packages, even for standard passive functions, can significantly improve channel performance compared with general‑purpose SMD parts.

A practical implication is that engineers often rely on S‑parameter models or cryogenic RF measurements of passives rather than just SPICE‑level DC models when closing a design.

Example: qualitative behavior of key passive technologies at cryogenic temperatures

The table below summarizes high‑level trends reported in cryogenic electronics literature for commonly used passive types.

Component typeTypical cryogenic behavior (qualitative)Notes for quantum use
NP0/C0G ceramic capsCapacitance nearly constant; low loss; stable ESRSuitable for RF shunting and bias networks
High‑k ceramic capsStrong capacitance change; higher loss; voltage dependencePrefer for warm‑stage decoupling, not precision
Film capacitorsLow dissipation; stable capacitance; good mechanical behaviorAttractive for filters and energy storage
Thin/metal‑film resistorsTCR decreases; resistance stable or slightly shiftedGood for precision biasing and sensing
Wirewound resistorsInductance and potential magnetic effects; good power handlingUse in power paths, avoid near sensitive RF
Ferrite‑core inductorsCore properties change; permeability and loss vary with TRequire characterization; avoid near qubits
Air‑core inductorsInductance stable; no core loss; larger footprintGood for high‑purity RF circuits

Values and behavior ranges should always be confirmed in the relevant series datasheet or characterization report.

Reliability at cryogenic temperatures

Cryogenic systems are costly and difficult to access, so passive component reliability is a first‑order concern. Reviews of cryogenic power electronics and NASA studies on commercial components at low temperature highlight several recurring issues:

  • Solder joint integrity:
    • Ceramic capacitors and other rigid components can stress solder joints during thermal cycling due to different coefficients of thermal expansion between component, PCB, and solder.
    • Some ceramic capacitors experience dramatic effective capacitance change at 4.2 K compared to room‑temperature nameplate values, which can also affect the intended circuit function if not accounted for.
  • Mechanical stress:
    • Larger packages are more prone to cracking or pad lifting under repeated cooling cycles.
    • Underfill, compliant terminations, or smaller case sizes may mitigate stress for critical parts.
  • Long‑term stability:
    • Resistors and capacitors may show drift after repeated cycling even if they remain within basic electrical limits.
    • Qualification plans should therefore include cycling representative boards through expected temperature profiles while monitoring parameters such as leakage, resistance, and capacitance.

Where possible, selecting series with published cryogenic test data or with aerospace/space heritage can reduce qualification effort.

Typical applications in quantum systems

The roles of passives differ strongly by temperature stage and physical location. A practical way to structure the bill of materials is by zone:

Room‑temperature racks and control electronics

  • Front‑end power:
    • Film or aluminum electrolytic capacitors for bulk energy storage before and after AC/DC conversion.
    • Surge protection devices and EMI filters at power entry.
  • Digital and mixed‑signal boards:
    • MLCC networks for decoupling FPGAs, DACs, ADCs, and RF synthesis chips.
    • Precision thin‑film resistors for reference, feedback, and measurement paths.
  • RF front‑end:
    • Low‑loss RF capacitors and resistors in synthesizer output stages and pre‑amplifier networks.
    • Programmable attenuators and filters to shape spectra before the cryostat.

Intermediate cryostat stages

  • RF line conditioning:
    • Attenuators, filters, and bias‑tees that reduce thermal noise from higher stages and define the spectral envelope reaching deeper cryogenic regions.
    • Components are typically specified for operation at liquid‑nitrogen or liquid‑helium temperatures, with low insertion loss and carefully controlled reflection.
  • Power and bias:
    • Limited numbers of capacitors and resistors used to stabilize bias points and decouple local cryogenic electronics, such as low‑noise amplifiers or multiplexers.
    • Preference for NP0/film capacitors and thin‑film resistors to minimize drift.

Coldest stage near qubits

  • Minimal component count:
    • Only the most essential passives are used, such as attenuation elements, shunt capacitors, or small bias resistors.
  • Non‑magnetic and mechanically compact:
    • Small‑package, non‑magnetic components are mounted on high‑frequency substrates or integrated into custom modules around the qubit chip.
  • Direct integration with interconnect:
    • In some platforms, passive functions are integrated closely with specially engineered connectors and flex assemblies designed specifically for quantum computing, forming a continuous RF and DC path optimized as a single structure.

Technical highlights engineers should look for

When screening datasheets and vendor portfolios for use in quantum hardware, several parameters stand out:

  • Electrical characteristics:
    • Guaranteed or characterized value tolerance and drift across the relevant temperature range, including below −55 °C where available.
    • Frequency‑dependent parameters such as ESR, ESL, and S‑parameters for capacitors, resistors (in RF roles), and inductors.
    • Voltage and current ratings that are still valid at cryogenic temperatures, especially for power or bias components.
  • Environmental performance:
    • Temperature cycling and shock/vibration ratings; any extended testing down to cryogenic temperatures is particularly useful.
    • Humidity and vacuum behavior for parts that may see outgassing constraints inside cryostats.
    • Magnetic behavior, preferably with explicit “non‑magnetic” variants for use near sensitive qubits.
  • Integration aspects:
    • Package geometries that support controlled impedance routing and compact layouts around RF connectors and coaxial feedthroughs.
    • Solder finish and assembly compatibility with the alloys and processes used in cryogenic hardware.
    • Availability of models (SPICE, S‑parameter, or equivalent) that cover both room‑temperature and cryogenic operation where possible.

Example: checklist for passive component selection in quantum projects

TopicKey questions
Temperature rangeIs the part characterized or at least tested near operating T?
MagnetismAre materials non‑magnetic or low‑magnetic where required?
RF behaviorAre S‑parameters or RF models available for design‑in?
Mechanical robustnessIs there data on thermal cycling and solder joint reliability?
PackagingDoes the package support RF routing and mechanical stability?
DocumentationAre datasheets and app notes explicit about low‑T behavior?

This type of checklist helps both engineering and purchasing teams converge on a consistent set of preferred series.

Availability and part‑number strategy

Quantum computing is still a relatively low‑volume market compared with mainstream consumer or automotive electronics, so many required parts are drawn from adjacent application spaces:

  • RF and microwave instrumentation:
    • High‑frequency chip resistors, capacitors, and attenuators with good RF models and stable behavior at low temperature.
  • High‑reliability and aerospace:
    • Film capacitors and precision resistors with extended environmental testing that implicitly supports operation in demanding conditions.
  • Cryogenic power electronics and research:
    • Parts previously evaluated in cryogenic power converters or scientific instruments (for example, space or high‑energy physics experiments) that can be repurposed for quantum control racks and cryostat infrastructure.

Part‑number and sourcing recommendations:

  • Segment by function and temperature:
    • Define preferred series for warm‑stage power, warm‑stage RF, intermediate cryostat stages, and qubit‑adjacent passives.
  • Build a controlled vendor list:
    • For highly specialized non‑magnetic or cryogenic‑rated parts, identify at least one primary and one secondary source where possible, even if they require slight footprint adaptations.
  • Track characterization history:
    • Maintain internal notes or qualification reports for each preferred series, documenting test conditions and observed behavior at low temperature or high frequency.

This structured approach helps avoid ad‑hoc substitutions that might undermine system performance during scaling or cost‑reduction efforts.

Design‑in notes for engineers

In practice, passives, connectors, PCB structures, and cryogenic hardware form a single, tightly coupled system. Treating them as independent, swappable blocks tends to fail at quantum performance levels.

Practical design‑in guidance:

  • Co‑design with interconnect:
    • When using high‑density or quantum‑optimized connectors and cabling, design passive placement and routing together with launch geometries and reference planes.
    • Keep passives out of high‑field regions or sharp mechanical transitions where possible, using short, well‑controlled transmission line sections between connectors and RF networks.
  • Use measurement‑driven models:
    • Incorporate S‑parameters of critical passives measured at relevant temperatures and frequencies into simulations.
    • For especially critical paths, build and characterize dedicated test coupons that include both connectors and passives in representative configurations.
  • Prototype under realistic conditions:
    • Validate boards and modules through repeated thermal cycling to operational temperatures, observing both electrical performance and mechanical integrity.
    • Include in‑situ RF and time‑domain measurements to catch degradation that might not be visible in DC checks alone.
  • Document reference stacks:
    • Once a combination of connectors, cables, PCB stack‑up, and passive series has been proven, treat it as a reusable platform for subsequent quantum projects.
    • Capture layout constraints, maximum power levels, and any special assembly instructions (for example, solder profiles or handling rules for non‑magnetic devices).

This methodology mirrors the system‑level engineering approach used in advanced quantum connectors and can significantly shorten design cycles for future generations.

Conclusion

Quantum computing systems expose passive components to a demanding combination of cryogenic temperatures, tight noise budgets, and stringent magnetic constraints. Evidence from cryogenic power electronics, RF metrology, and quantum research setups points to a set of preferred technologies—NP0/film capacitors, thin‑film resistors, carefully chosen magnetics, and non‑magnetic constructions—when performance and reliability matter most. By combining these technology choices with system‑level co‑design of connectors, cabling, and PCB structures, design engineers and purchasing teams can build robust, scalable quantum platforms that make full use of both classical and quantum hardware capabilities.

Source

This article is based on quantum computing articles referenced below, supplemented with peer‑reviewed literature and technical reviews on cryogenic power electronics, RF metrology, and passive component behavior at low temperatures. Exact numerical performance values for specific series should always be taken from the relevant manufacturer datasheet.

References

  1. Connectors for Quantum Computing – The Samtec Blog
  2. Passive Components for Quantum Computing – TTI MarketEye
  3. Review of Power Electronics Components at Cryogenic Temperatures – MDPI
  4. Cryogenic Power Electronics: All about Ultra‑cold Components – Electronics360
  5. Towards Cryogenic Scalable Quantum Computing with Trapped Ions – Dissertation
  6. RF Metrology at Cryogenic Temperatures – NPL
  7. Cryogenic Applications of Commercial Electronic Components – NASA Technical Report

Related

Recent Posts

Miniaturization of MLCCs and Electrolytics, KAVX Tech Chat

21.1.2026
17

Exxelia Offers Custom Naval Transformers and Inductors

21.1.2026
10

Researchers Demonstrated 32nm Aluminum Vacuum Gap Capacitor

20.1.2026
21

Conductive Polymer Capacitor Market and Design‑In Guide to 2035

20.1.2026
62

TDK Releases High Performance 105C DC Link Film Capacitors

19.1.2026
41

YAGEO Offers Automotive MOVs for EV and AI power

19.1.2026
24

YAGEO Acquires 100% of Shares of Shibaura Electronics

19.1.2026
62

Vishay Extends Aluminum Capacitors Rating Up to 600 V for DC Links

15.1.2026
32

Würth Elektronik Introduces Product Navigator for Passive Components

14.1.2026
71

Upcoming Events

Jan 27
16:00 - 17:00 CET

Simplifying Vehicle Development with Automotive Ethernet and Zonal Smart Switch Technologies

Feb 24
16:00 - 17:00 CET

Designing Qi2 Wireless Power Systems: Practical Development and EMC Optimization

Mar 21
All day

PSMA Capacitor Workshop 2026

View Calendar

Popular Posts

  • Buck Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boost Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • LLC Resonant Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Flyback Converter Design and Calculation

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ripple Current and its Effects on the Performance of Capacitors

    3 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 0
  • How Metal Prices Are Driving Passive Component Price Hikes

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • MLCC and Ceramic Capacitors

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dual Active Bridge (DAB) Topology

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • What is a Dielectric Constant and DF of Plastic Materials?

    4 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 0
  • Degradation of Capacitors and its Failure Mechanisms

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Newsletter Subscription

 

Passive Components Blog

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • EPCI Membership & Advertisement
  • About

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Knowledge Blog
  • PCNS

© EPCI - Leading Passive Components Educational and Information Site

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version