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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
A CMOS-compatible Ising Machine with Bistable Nodes
arXiv
Authors: Richard Afoakwa, Yiqiao Zhang, Uday Kumar Reddy Vengalam, Zeljko Ignjatovic, Michael Huang
Year
2020
Paper ID
22260
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
161
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Physical Ising machines rely on nature to guide a dynamical system towards an optimal state which can be read out as a heuristical solution to a combinatorial optimization problem. Such designs that use nature as a computing mechanism can lead to higher performance and/or lower operation costs and hence have attracted research and prototyping efforts from industry and academia. Quantum annealers are a prominent example of such efforts. However, some physics-centric Ising machines require stringent operating conditions that result in significant bulk and energy budget. Such disadvantages may be acceptable if these designs provide some significant intrinsic advantages at a much larger scale in the future, which remains to be seen. But for now, integrated electronic designs of Ising machines allow more immediate applications. We propose one such design that uses bistable nodes, coupled with programmable and variable strengths. The design is fully CMOS compatible for chip-scale applications and demonstrates competitive solution quality and significantly superior execution time and energy.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2020 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Physical Ising machines rely on nature to guide a dynamical system towards an optimal state which can be read out as a heuristical solution to a combinatorial optimization problem.
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