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Paper 1
A 67%-Rate CSS Code on the FCC Lattice: [[192,130,3]] from Weight-12 Stabilizers
Raghu Kulkarni
- Year
- 2026
- Journal
- arXiv preprint
- DOI
- arXiv:2603.20294
- arXiv
- 2603.20294
We construct a three-dimensional Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) stabilizer code on the Face-Centered Cubic (FCC) lattice. Physical qubits reside on the edges of the lattice (coordination $K=12$); X-stabilizers act on octahedral voids and Z-stabilizers on vertices, both with uniform weight 12. Computational verification confirms CSS validity ($H_{X}H_{Z}^{T}=0$ over GF(2)) and reveals $k=2L^{3}+2$ logical qubits: $k=130$ at $L=4$ and $k=434$ at $L=6$, yielding encoding rates of 67.7% and 67.0% respectively. The minimum distance $d=3$ is proven exactly by exhaustive elimination of all weight-$\le 2$ candidates combined with constructive weight-3 non-stabilizer codewords. The code parameters are [[192, 130, 3]] at $L=4$ and [[648, 434, 3]] at $L=6$. This rate is 24x higher than the cubic 3D toric code (2.8% at $d=4$), though at a lower distance ($d=3$ vs. $d=4$); the comparison is across different distances. The high rate originates in a structural surplus: the FCC lattice has $3L^{3}$ edges but only $L^{3}-2$ independent stabilizer constraints, leaving $k=2L^{3}+2$ logical degrees of freedom. We provide a minimum-weight perfect matching (MWPM) decoder adapted to the FCC geometry, demonstrate a 10x coding gain at $p=0.001$ (and 63x at $p=0.0005$), and discuss implications for fault-tolerant quantum computing on neutral-atom and photonic platforms.
Open paperPaper 2
Entanglement-assisted Quantum Error Correcting Code Saturating The Classical Singleton Bound
Soham Ghosh, Evagoras Stylianou, Holger Boche
- Year
- 2024
- Journal
- arXiv preprint
- DOI
- arXiv:2410.04130
- arXiv
- 2410.04130
We introduce a construction for entanglement-assisted quantum error-correcting codes (EAQECCs) that saturates the classical Singleton bound with less shared entanglement than any known method for code rates below $ \frac{k}{n} = \frac{1}{3} $. For higher rates, our EAQECC also meets the Singleton bound, although with increased entanglement requirements. Additionally, we demonstrate that any classical $[n,k,d]_q$ code can be transformed into an EAQECC with parameters $[[n,k,d;2k]]_q$ using $2k$ pre-shared maximally entangled pairs. The complexity of our encoding protocol for $k$-qudits with $q$ levels is $\mathcal{O}(k \log_{\frac{q}{q-1}}(k))$, excluding the complexity of encoding and decoding the classical MDS code. While this complexity remains linear in $k$ for systems of reasonable size, it increases significantly for larger-levelled systems, highlighting the need for further research into complexity reduction.
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