Performing SU(d) operations and rudimentary algorithms in a superconducting transmon qudit for d=3 and d=4

  1. Pei Liu,
  2. Ruixia Wang,
  3. Jing-Ning Zhang,
  4. Yingshan Zhang,
  5. Xiaoxia Cai,
  6. Huikai Xu,
  7. Zhiyuan Li,
  8. Jiaxiu Han,
  9. Xuegang Li,
  10. Guangming Xue,
  11. Weiyang Liu,
  12. Li You,
  13. Yirong Jin,
  14. and Haifeng Yu
Quantum computation architecture based on d-level systems, or qudits, has attracted considerable attention recently due to their enlarged Hilbert space. Extensive theoretical and experimental
studies have addressed aspects of algorithms and benchmarking techniques for qudit-based quantum computation and quantum information processing. Here, we report a physical realization of qudit with upto 4 embedded levels in a superconducting transmon, demonstrating high-fidelity initialization, manipulation, and simultaneous multi-level readout. In addition to constructing SU(d) operations and benchmarking protocols for quantum state tomography, quantum process tomography, and randomized benchmarking etc, we experimentally carry out these operations for d=3 and d=4. Moreover, we perform prototypical quantum algorithms and observe outcomes consistent with expectations. Our work will hopefully stimulate further research interest in developing manipulation protocols and efficient applications for quantum processors with qudits.

Error per single-qubit gate below 10−4 in a superconducting qubit

  1. Zhiyuan Li,
  2. Pei Liu,
  3. Peng Zhao,
  4. Zhenyu Mi,
  5. Huikai Xu,
  6. Xuehui Liang,
  7. Tang Su,
  8. Weijie Sun,
  9. Guangming Xue,
  10. Jing-Ning Zhang,
  11. Weiyang Liu,
  12. Yirong Jin,
  13. and Haifeng Yu
Implementing arbitrary single-qubit gates with near perfect fidelity is among the most fundamental requirements in gate-based quantum information processing. In this work, we fabric
a transmon qubit with long coherence times and demonstrate single-qubit gates with the average gate error below 10−4, i.e. (7.42±0.04)×10−5 by randomized benchmarking (RB). To understand the error sources, we experimentally obtain an error budget, consisting of the decoherence errors lower bounded by (4.62±0.04)×10−5 and the leakage rate per gate of (1.16±0.04)×10−5. Moreover, we reconstruct the process matrices for the single-qubit gates by the gate set tomography (GST), with which we simulate RB sequences and obtain single-qubit fedlities consistent with experimental results. We also observe non-Markovian behavior in the experiment of long-sequence GST, which may provide guidance for further calibration. The demonstration extends the upper limit that the average fidelity of single-qubit gates can reach in a transmon-qubit system, and thus can be an essential step towards practical and reliable quantum computation in the near future.

Spurious microwave crosstalk in floating superconducting circuits

  1. Peng Zhao,
  2. Yingshan Zhang,
  3. Xuegang Li,
  4. Jiaxiu Han,
  5. Huikai Xu,
  6. Guangming Xue,
  7. Yirong Jin,
  8. and Haifeng Yu
Crosstalk is a major concern in the implementation of large-scale quantum computation since it can degrade the performance of qubit addressing and cause gate errors. Finding the origin
of crosstalk and separating contributions from different channels are essential prerequisites for figuring out crosstalk mitigation schemes. Here, by performing circuit analysis of two coupled floating transmon qubits, we demonstrate that, even if the stray coupling, e.g., between a qubit and the drive line of its nearby qubit, is absent, microwave crosstalk between qubits can still exist due to the presence of a spurious crosstalk channel. This channel arises from free modes, which are supported by the floating structure of transmon qubits, i.e., the two superconducting islands of the qubits have no galvanic connection to the ground. For various geometric layouts of floating transmon qubits, we give the contributions of microwave crosstalk from the spurious channel and show that this channel can become a performance-limiting factor in qubit addressing. This research could provide guidance for suppressing microwave crosstalk between floating superconducting qubits through the design of qubit circuits.

Quantum crosstalk analysis for simultaneous gate operations on superconducting qubits

  1. Peng Zhao,
  2. Kehuan Linghu,
  3. Zhiyuan Li,
  4. Peng Xu,
  5. Ruixia Wang,
  6. Guangming Xue,
  7. Yirong Jin,
  8. and Haifeng Yu
Maintaining or even improving gate performance with growing numbers of parallel controlled qubits is a vital requirement towards fault-tolerant quantum computing. For superconducting
quantum processors, though isolated one- or two-qubit gates have been demonstrated with high-fidelity, implementing these gates in parallel commonly show worse performance. Generally, this degradation is attributed to various crosstalks between qubits, such as quantum crosstalk due to residual inter-qubit coupling. An understanding of the exact nature of these crosstalks is critical to figuring out respective mitigation schemes and improved qubit architecture designs with low crosstalk. Here we give a theoretical analysis of quantum crosstalk impact on simultaneous gate operations in a qubit architecture, where fixed-frequency transmon qubits are coupled via a tunable bus, and sub-100-ns controlled-Z (CZ) gates can be realized by applying a baseband flux pulse on the bus. Our analysis shows that for microwave-driven single qubit gates, the dressing from qubit-qubit coupling can cause non-negligible cross-driving errors when qubits operate near frequency collision regions. During CZ gate operations, although unwanted near-neighbor interactions are nominally turned off, sub-MHz parasitic next-near-neighbor interactions involving spectator qubits can still exist, causing considerable leakage or control error when one operates qubit systems around these parasitic resonance points. To ensure high-fidelity simultaneous operations, this could rise a request to figure out a better way to balance the gate error from target qubit systems themselves and the error from non-participating spectator qubits. Overall, our analysis suggests that towards useful quantum processors, the qubit architecture should be examined carefully in the context of high-fidelity simultaneous gate operations in a scalable qubit lattice.

Realizing discrete time crystal in an one-dimensional superconducting qubit chain

  1. Huikai Xu,
  2. Jingning Zhang,
  3. Jiaxiu Han,
  4. Zhiyuan Li,
  5. Guangming Xue,
  6. Weiyang Liu,
  7. Yirong Jin,
  8. and Haifeng Yu
Floquet engineering, i.e. driving the system with periodic Hamiltonians, not only provides great flexibility in analog quantum simulation, but also supports phase structures of great
richness. It has been proposed that Floquet systems can support a discrete time-translation symmetry (TTS) broken phase, dubbed the discrete time crystal (DTC). This proposal, as well as the exotic phase, has attracted tremendous interest among the community of quantum simulation. Here we report the observation of the DTC in an one-dimensional superconducting qubit chain. We experimentally realize long-time stroboscopic quantum dynamics of a periodically driven spin system consisting of 8 transmon qubits, and obtain a lifetime of the DTC order limited by the coherence time of the underlying physical platform. We also explore the crossover between the discrete TTS broken and unbroken phases via various physical signatures. Our work extends the usage of superconducting circuit systems in quantum simulation of many-body physics, and provides an experimental tool for investigating non-equilibrium dynamics and phase structures.

Vacuum-gap transmon qubits realized using flip-chip technology

  1. Xuegang Li,
  2. Yingshan Zhang,
  3. Chuhong Yang,
  4. Zhiyuan Li,
  5. Junhua Wang,
  6. Tang Su,
  7. Mo Chen,
  8. Yongchao Li,
  9. Chengyao Li,
  10. Zhenyu Mi,
  11. Xuehui Liang,
  12. Chenlu Wang,
  13. Zhen Yang,
  14. Yulong Feng,
  15. Kehuan Linghu,
  16. Huikai Xu,
  17. Jiaxiu Han,
  18. Weiyang Liu,
  19. Peng Zhao,
  20. Teng Ma,
  21. Ruixia Wang,
  22. Jingning Zhang,
  23. Yu Song,
  24. Pei Liu,
  25. Ziting Wang,
  26. Zhaohua Yang,
  27. Guangming Xue,
  28. Yirong Jin,
  29. and Haifeng Yu
Significant progress has been made in building large-scale superconducting quantum processors based on flip-chip technology. In this work, we use the flip-chip technology to realize
a modified transmon qubit, donated as the „flipmon“, whose large shunt capacitor is replaced by a vacuum-gap parallel plate capacitor. To further reduce the qubit footprint, we place one of the qubit pads and a single Josephson junction on the bottom chip and the other pad on the top chip which is galvanically connected with the single Josephson junction through an indium bump. The electric field participation ratio can arrive at nearly 53% in air when the vacuum-gap is about 5 microns, and thus potentially leading to a lower dielectric loss. The coherence times of the flipmons are measured in the range of 30-60 microseconds, which are comparable with that of traditional transmons with similar fabrication processes. The electric field simulation indicates that the metal-air interface’s participation ratio increases significantly and may dominate the qubit’s decoherence. This suggests that more careful surface treatment needs to be considered. No evidence shows that the indium bumps inside the flipmons cause significant decoherence. With well-designed geometry and good surface treatment, the coherence of the flipmons can be further improved.

Transmon qubit with relaxation time exceeding 0.5 milliseconds

  1. Chenlu Wang,
  2. Xuegang Li,
  3. Huikai Xu,
  4. Zhiyuan Li,
  5. Junhua Wang,
  6. Zhen Yang,
  7. Zhenyu Mi,
  8. Xuehui Liang,
  9. Tang Su,
  10. Chuhong Yang,
  11. Guangyue Wang,
  12. Wenyan Wang,
  13. Yongchao Li,
  14. Mo Chen,
  15. Chengyao Li,
  16. Kehuan Linghu,
  17. Jiaxiu Han,
  18. Yingshan Zhang,
  19. Yulong Feng,
  20. Yu Song,
  21. Teng Ma,
  22. Jingning Zhang,
  23. Ruixia Wang,
  24. Peng Zhao,
  25. Weiyang Liu,
  26. Guangming Xue,
  27. Yirong Jin,
  28. and Haifeng Yu
By using the dry etching process of tantalum (Ta) film, we had obtained transmon qubit with the best lifetime (T1) 503 us, suggesting that the dry etching process can be adopted in
the following multi-qubit fabrication with Ta film. We also compared the relaxation and coherence times of transmons made with different materials (Ta, Nb and Al) with the same design and fabrication processes of Josephson junction, we found that samples prepared with Ta film had the best performance, followed by those with Al film and Nb film. We inferred that the reason for this difference was due to the different loss of oxide materials located at the metal-air interface.

Suppression of static ZZ interaction in an all-transmon quantum processor

  1. Peng Zhao,
  2. Dong Lan,
  3. Peng Xu,
  4. Guangming Xue,
  5. Mace Blank,
  6. Xinsheng Tan,
  7. Haifeng Yu,
  8. and Yang Yu
The superconducting transmon qubit is currently a leading qubit modality for quantum computing, but gate performance in quantum processor with transmons is often insufficient to support
running complex algorithms for practical applications. It is thus highly desirable to further improve gate performance. Due to the weak anharmonicity of transmon, a static ZZ interaction between coupled transmons commonly exists, undermining the gate performance, and in long term, it can become performance limiting. Here we theoretically explore a previously unexplored parameter region in an all-transmon system to address this issue. We show that an experimentally feasible parameter region, where the ZZ interaction is heavily suppressed while leaving XY interaction with an adequate strength to implement two-qubit gates, can be found in an all-transmon system. Thus, two-qubit gates, such as cross-resonance gate or iSWAP gate, can be realized without the detrimental effect from static ZZ interaction. To illustrate this, we show that an iSWAP gate with fast gate speed and dramatically lower conditional phase error can be achieved. Scaling up to large-scale transmon quantum processor, especially the cases with fixed coupling, addressing error, idling error, and crosstalk that arises from static ZZ interaction could also be heavily suppressed.

Realisation of adiabatic and di-adiabatic CZ gates in superconducting qubits coupled with a tunable coupler

  1. Huikai Xu,
  2. Weiyang Liu,
  3. Zhiyuan Li,
  4. Jiaxiu Han,
  5. Jingning Zhang,
  6. Kehuan Linghu,
  7. Yongchao Li,
  8. Mo Chen,
  9. Zhen Yang,
  10. Junhua Wang,
  11. Teng Ma,
  12. Guangming Xue,
  13. Yirong Jin,
  14. and Haifeng Yu
High fidelity two-qubit gates are fundamental for scaling up the superconducting number. We use two qubits coupled via a frequency-tunable coupler which can adjust the coupling strength,
and demonstrate the CZ gate using two different schemes, adiabatic and di-adiabatic methods. The Clifford based Randomized Benchmarking (RB) method is used to assess and optimize the CZ gate fidelity. The fidelity of adiabatic and di-adiabatic CZ gates are 99.53(8)% and 98.72(2)%, respectively. We also analyze the errors induced by the decoherence, which are 92% of total for adiabatic CZ gate and 46% of total for di-adiabatic CZ gates. The adiabatic scheme is robust against the operation error. But the di-adiabatic scheme is sensitive to the purity and operation errors. Comparing to 30 ns duration time of adiabatic CZ gate, the duration time of di-adiabatic CZ gate is 19 ns, revealing lower incoherence error rincoherent,Clfford = 0.0197(5) than r′incoherent,Clfford = 0.0223(3).

Topological Maxwell Metal Bands in a Superconducting Qutrit

  1. Xinsheng Tan,
  2. Dan-Wei Zhang,
  3. Qiang Liu,
  4. Guangming Xue,
  5. Hai-Feng Yu,
  6. Yan-Qing Zhu,
  7. Hui Yan,
  8. Shi-Liang Zhu,
  9. and Yang Yu
We experimentally explore the topological Maxwell metal bands by mapping the momentum space of condensed-matter models to the tunable parameter space of superconducting quantum circuits.
An exotic band structure that is effectively described by the spin-1 Maxwell equations is imaged. Three-fold degenerate points dubbed Maxwell points are observed in the Maxwell metal bands. Moreover, we engineer and observe the topological phase transition from the topological Maxwell metal to a trivial insulator, and report the first experiment to measure the Chern numbers that are higher than one.