Quantum computers can potentially achieve an exponential speedup versus classical computers on certain computational tasks, as was recently demonstrated in systems of superconductingqubits. However, these qubits have large footprints due to the need of ultra low-loss capacitors. The large electric field volume of \textit{quantum compatible} capacitors stems from their distributed nature. This hinders scaling by increasing parasitic coupling in circuit designs, degrading individual qubit addressability, and limiting the minimum achievable circuit area. Here, we report the use of van der Waals (vdW) materials to reduce the qubit area by a factor of >1000. These qubit structures combine parallel-plate capacitors comprising crystalline layers of superconducting niobium diselenide (NbSe2) and insulating hexagonal-boron nitride (hBN) with conventional aluminum-based Josephson junctions. We measure a vdW transmon T1 relaxation time of 1.06 μs, demonstrating that a highly-compact capacitor can reach a loss-tangent of <2.83×10−5. Our results demonstrate a promising path towards breaking the paradigm of requiring large geometric capacitors for long quantum coherence in superconducting qubits, and illustrate the broad utility of layered heterostructures in low-loss, high-coherence quantum devices.[/expand]
Measurements that occur within the internal layers of a quantum circuit — mid-circuit measurements — are an important quantum computing primitive, most notably for quantumerror correction. Mid-circuit measurements have both classical and quantum outputs, so they can be subject to error modes that do not exist for measurements that terminate quantum circuits. Here we show how to characterize mid-circuit measurements, modelled by quantum instruments, using a technique that we call quantum instrument linear gate set tomography (QILGST). We then apply this technique to characterize a dispersive measurement on a superconducting transmon qubit within a multiqubit system. By varying the delay time between the measurement pulse and subsequent gates, we explore the impact of residual cavity photon population on measurement error. QILGST can resolve different error modes and quantify the total error from a measurement; in our experiment, for delay times above 1000 ns we measured a total error rate (i.e., half diamond distance) of ϵ⋄=8.1±1.4%, a readout fidelity of 97.0±0.3%, and output quantum state fidelities of 96.7±0.6% and 93.7±0.7% when measuring 0 and 1, respectively.
Demonstrating the quantum computational advantage will require high-fidelity control and readout of multi-qubit systems. As system size increases, multiplexed qubit readout becomesa practical necessity to limit the growth of resource overhead. Many contemporary qubit-state discriminators presume single-qubit operating conditions or require considerable computational effort, limiting their potential extensibility. Here, we present multi-qubit readout using neural networks as state discriminators. We compare our approach to contemporary methods employed on a quantum device with five superconducting qubits and frequency-multiplexed readout. We find that fully-connected feedforward neural networks increase the qubit-state-assignment fidelity for our system. Relative to contemporary discriminators, the assignment error rate is reduced by up to 25 % due to the compensation of system-dependent nonidealities such as readout crosstalk which is reduced by up to one order of magnitude. Our work demonstrates a potentially extensible building block for high-fidelity readout relevant to both near-term devices and future fault-tolerant systems.
Control electronics for superconducting quantum processors have strict requirements for accurate command of the sensitive quantum states of their qubits. Hinging on the purity of ultra-phase-stableoscillators to upconvert very-low-noise baseband pulses, conventional control systems can become prohibitively complex and expensive when scaling to larger quantum devices, especially as high sampling rates become desirable for fine-grained pulse shaping. Few-GHz radio-frequency digital-to-analog converters (RF DACs) present a more economical avenue for high-fidelity control while simultaneously providing greater command over the spectrum of the synthesized signal. Modern RF DACs with extra-wide bandwidths are able to directly synthesize tones above their sampling rates, thereby keeping the system clock rate at a level compatible with modern digital logic systems while still being able to generate high-frequency pulses with arbitrary profiles. We have incorporated custom superconducting qubit control logic into off-the-shelf hardware capable of low-noise pulse synthesis up to 7.5 GHz using an RF DAC clocked at 5 GHz. Our approach enables highly linear and stable microwave synthesis over a wide bandwidth, giving rise to resource-efficient control and the potential for reducing the required number of cables entering the cryogenic environment. We characterize the performance of the hardware using a five-transmon superconducting device and demonstrate consistently reduced two-qubit gate error (as low as 1.8%) accompanied by superior control chain linearity compared to traditional configurations. The exceptional flexibility and stability further establish a foundation for scalable quantum control beyond intermediate-scale devices.
We propose a low noise, triply-resonant, electro-optic (EO) scheme for quantum microwave-to-optical conversion based on coupled nanophotonics resonators integrated with a superconductingqubit. Our optical system features a split resonance – a doublet – with a tunable frequency splitting that matches the microwave resonance frequency of the superconducting qubit. This is in contrast to conventional approaches where large optical resonators with free-spectral range comparable to the qubit microwave frequency are used. In our system, EO mixing between the optical pump coupled into the low frequency doublet mode and a resonance microwave photon results in an up-converted optical photon on resonance with high frequency doublet mode. Importantly, the down-conversion process, which is the source of noise, is suppressed in our scheme as the coupled-resonator system does not support modes at that frequency. Our device has at least an order of magnitude smaller footprint than the conventional devices, resulting in large overlap between optical and microwave fields and large photon conversion rate (g/2π) in the range of ∼5-15 kHz. Owing to large g factor and doubly-resonant nature of our device, microwave-to-optical frequency conversion can be achieved with optical pump powers in the range of tens of microwatts, even with moderate values for optical Q (∼106) and microwave Q (∼104). The performance metrics of our device, with substantial improvement over the previous EO-based approaches, promise a scalable quantum microwave-to-optical conversion and networking of superconducting processors via optical fiber communication.