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M2CS: A Microwave Measurement and Control System for Large-scale Superconducting Quantum Processors

arXiv
Authors: Jiawei Zhang, Xuandong Sun, Zechen Guo, Yuefeng Yuan, Yubin Zhang, Ji Chu, Wenhui Huang, Yongqi Liang, Jiawei Qiu, Daxiong Sun, Ziyu Tao, Jiajian Zhang, Weijie Guo, Ji Jiang, Xiayu Linpeng, Yang Liu, Wenhui Ren, Jingjing Niu, Youpeng Zhong, Dapeng Yu

Year

2024

Paper ID

64018

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

178

Citations

N/A

Abstract

As superconducting quantum computing continues to advance at an unprecedented pace, there is a compelling demand for the innovation of specialized electronic instruments that act as crucial conduits between quantum processors and host computers. Here, we introduce a Microwave Measurement and Control System (M2CS) dedicated for large-scale superconducting quantum processors. M2CS features a compact modular design that balances overall performance, scalability, and flexibility. Electronic tests of M2CS show key metrics comparable to commercial instruments. Benchmark tests on transmon superconducting qubits further show qubit coherence and gate fidelities comparable to state-of-the-art results, confirming M2CS's capability to meet the stringent requirements of quantum experiments run on intermediate-scale quantum processors. The system's compact and scalable design offers significant room for further enhancements that could accommodate the measurement and control requirements of over 1000 qubits, and can also be adopted to other quantum computing platforms such as trapped ions and silicon quantum dots. The M2CS architecture may also be applied to wider range of scenarios, such as microwave kinetic inductance detectors, as well as phased array radar systems.

Why This Paper Matters

  • This paper contributes to the Superconducting Qubits research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
  • It adds a 2024 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
  • As superconducting quantum computing continues to advance at an unprecedented pace, there is a compelling demand for the innovation of specialized electronic instruments that...

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