Niobium films are a key component in modern two-dimensional superconducting qubits,
yet their contribution to the total qubit decay rate is not fully understood. The presence of different
layers of materials and interfaces makes it difficult to identify the dominant loss channels in present
two-dimensional qubit designs. In this paper we present the first study which directly correlates
measurements of RF losses in such films to material parameters by investigating a high-power
impulse magnetron sputtered (HiPIMS) film atop a three-dimensional niobium superconducting
radiofrequency (SRF) resonator. By using a 3D SRF structure, we are able to isolate the niobium
film loss from other contributions. Our findings indicate that microwave dissipation in the
HiPIMS-prepared niobium films, within the quantum regime, resembles that of record-high
intrinsic quality factor of bulk niobium SRF cavities, with lifetimes extending into seconds.
Microstructure and impurity level of the niobium film do not significantly affect the losses. These
results set the scale of microwave losses in niobium films and show that niobium losses do not
dominate the observed coherence times in present two-dimensional superconducting qubit designs,
instead highlighting the dominant role of the dielectric oxide in limiting the performance. We can
also set a bound for when niobium film losses will become a limitation for qubit lifetimes.
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.08856