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Quantum Error Correction Fault Tolerance Superconducting Qubits

Cyclone: Designing Efficient and Highly Parallel QCCD Architectural Codesigns for Fault Tolerant Quantum Memory

arXiv
Authors: Sahil Khan, Abhinav Anand, Kenneth R. Brown, Jonathan M. Baker

Year

2025

Paper ID

16904

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

271

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Modular trapped-ion quantum computing hardware, known as QCCDs require shuttling operations in order to maintain effective all-to-all connectivity. Each module or trap can perform only one operation at a time, resulting in low intra-trap parallelism, but there is no restriction on operations happening on independent traps, enabling high inter-trap parallelism. Unlike their superconducting counterparts, the design space for QCCDs is relatively flexible and can be explored beyond current grid designs. In particular, current grid-based architectures significantly limit the performance of many promising, high-rate codes such as HGP codes and BB codes, suffering from numerous trap to trap "roadblocks", forcing serialization and destroying the inherent parallelism of these codes.. Many of these codes are highly parallelizable, meaning that with appropriate hardware layouts and matching software schedules, execution latency can be reduced. Faster execution, in turn, reduces error accumulation from decoherence and heating, ultimately improving code performance when mapped to realistic hardware. To address this, we propose Cyclone, a circular software-hardware codesign that departs from traditional 2D grids in favor of a flexible ring topology, where ancilla qubits move in lockstep. Cyclone eliminates roadblocks, bounds total movement, and enables high levels of parallelism, resulting in up to 4times speedup in execution times. With HGP codes, Cyclone achieves up to a 2times order of magnitude improvement in logical error rate, and with BB codes, this improvement reaches up to a 3times in order of magnitude.Spatially, Cyclone reduces the number of required traps and ancilla qubits by 2times.The overall spacetime improvement over a standard grid is up to sim 20 times, demonstrating Cyclone as a scalable and efficient alternative to conventional 2D QCCD architectures.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2025 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • Modular trapped-ion quantum computing hardware, known as QCCDs require shuttling operations in order to maintain effective all-to-all connectivity.

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