Floquet Engineering of Anisotropic Transverse Interactions in Superconducting Qubits

  1. Yongqi Liang,
  2. Wenhui Huang,
  3. Libo Zhang,
  4. Ziyu Tao,
  5. Kai Tang,
  6. Ji Chu,
  7. Jiawei Qiu,
  8. Xuandong Sun,
  9. Yuxuan Zhou,
  10. Jiawei Zhang,
  11. Jiajian Zhang,
  12. Weijie Guo,
  13. Yang Liu,
  14. Yuanzhen Chen,
  15. Song Liu,
  16. Youpeng Zhong,
  17. Jingjing Niu,
  18. and Dapeng Yu
Superconducting transmon qubits have established as a leading candidate for quantum computation, as well as a flexible platform for exploring exotic quantum phases and dynamics. However,
physical coupling naturally yields isotropic transverse interactions between qubits, restricting their access to diverse quantum phases that require spatially dependent interactions. Here, we demonstrate the simultaneous realization of both pairing (XX-YY) and hopping (XX+YY) interactions between transmon qubits by Floquet engineering. The coherent superposition of these interactions enables independent control over the XX and YY terms, yielding anisotropic transverse interactions. By aligning the transverse interactions along a 1D chain of six qubits, as calibrated via Aharonov-Bohm interference in synthetic space, we synthesize a transverse field Ising chain model and explore its dynamical phase transition under varying external field. The scalable synthesis of anisotropic transverse interactions paves the way for the implementation of more complex physical systems requiring spatially dependent interactions, enriching the toolbox for engineering quantum phases with superconducting qubits.

In situ mixer calibration for superconducting quantum circuits

  1. Nan Wu,
  2. Jing Lin,
  3. Changrong Xie,
  4. Zechen Guo,
  5. Wenhui Huang,
  6. Libo Zhang,
  7. Yuxuan Zhou,
  8. Xuandong Sun,
  9. Jiawei Zhang,
  10. Weijie Guo,
  11. Xiayu Linpeng,
  12. Song Liu,
  13. Yang Liu,
  14. Wenhui Ren,
  15. Ziyu Tao,
  16. Ji Jiang,
  17. Ji Chu,
  18. Jingjing Niu,
  19. Youpeng Zhong,
  20. and Dapeng Yu
Mixers play a crucial role in superconducting quantum computing, primarily by facilitating frequency conversion of signals to enable precise control and readout of quantum states. However,
imperfections, particularly carrier leakage and unwanted sideband signal, can significantly compromise control fidelity. To mitigate these defects, regular and precise mixer calibrations are indispensable, yet they pose a formidable challenge in large-scale quantum control. Here, we introduce an in situ calibration technique and outcome-focused mixer calibration scheme using superconducting qubits. Our method leverages the qubit’s response to imperfect signals, allowing for calibration without modifying the wiring configuration. We experimentally validate the efficacy of this technique by benchmarking single-qubit gate fidelity and qubit coherence time.

Noise-induced quantum synchronization and maximally entangled mixed states in superconducting circuits

  1. Ziyu Tao,
  2. Finn Schmolke,
  3. Chang-Kang Hu,
  4. Wenhui Huang,
  5. Yuxuan Zhou,
  6. Jiawei Zhang,
  7. Ji Chu,
  8. Libo Zhang,
  9. Xuandong Sun,
  10. Zecheng Guo,
  11. Jingjing Niu,
  12. Wenle Weng,
  13. Song Liu,
  14. Youpeng Zhong,
  15. Dian Tan,
  16. Dapeng Yu,
  17. and Eric Lutz
Random fluctuations can lead to cooperative effects in complex systems. We here report the experimental observation of noise-induced quantum synchronization in a chain of superconducting
transmon qubits with nearest-neighbor interactions. The application of Gaussian white noise to a single site leads to synchronous oscillations in the entire chain. We show that the two synchronized end qubits are entangled, with nonzero concurrence, and that they belong to a class of generalized Bell states known as maximally entangled mixed states, whose entanglement cannot be increased by any global unitary. We further demonstrate the stability against frequency detuning of both synchronization and entanglement by determining the corresponding generalized Arnold tongue diagrams. Our results highlight the constructive influence of noise in a quantum many-body system and uncover the potential role of synchronization for mixed-state quantum information science.

Coupler-Assisted Leakage Reduction for Scalable Quantum Error Correction with Superconducting Qubits

  1. Xiaohan Yang,
  2. Ji Chu,
  3. Zechen Guo,
  4. Wenhui Huang,
  5. Yongqi Liang,
  6. Jiawei Liu,
  7. Jiawei Qiu,
  8. Xuandong Sun,
  9. Ziyu Tao,
  10. Jiawei Zhang,
  11. Jiajian Zhang,
  12. Libo Zhang,
  13. Yuxuan Zhou,
  14. Weijie Guo,
  15. Ling Hu,
  16. Ji Jiang,
  17. Yang Liu,
  18. Xiayu Linpeng,
  19. Tingyong Chen,
  20. Yuanzhen Chen,
  21. Jingjing Niu,
  22. Song Liu,
  23. Youpeng Zhong,
  24. and Dapeng Yu
Superconducting qubits are a promising platform for building fault-tolerant quantum computers, with recent achievement showing the suppression of logical error with increasing code
size. However, leakage into non-computational states, a common issue in practical quantum systems including superconducting circuits, introduces correlated errors that undermine QEC scalability. Here, we propose and demonstrate a leakage reduction scheme utilizing tunable couplers, a widely adopted ingredient in large-scale superconducting quantum processors. Leveraging the strong frequency tunability of the couplers and stray interaction between the couplers and readout resonators, we eliminate state leakage on the couplers, thus suppressing space-correlated errors caused by population propagation among the couplers. Assisted by the couplers, we further reduce leakage to higher qubit levels with high efficiency (98.1%) and low error rate on the computational subspace (0.58%), suppressing time-correlated errors during QEC cycles. The performance of our scheme demonstrates its potential as an indispensable building block for scalable QEC with superconducting qubits.

Deterministic quantum teleportation between distant superconducting chips

  1. Jiawei Qiu,
  2. Yang Liu,
  3. Jingjing Niu,
  4. Ling Hu,
  5. Yukai Wu,
  6. Libo Zhang,
  7. Wenhui Huang,
  8. Yuanzhen Chen,
  9. Jian Li,
  10. Song Liu,
  11. Youpeng Zhong,
  12. Luming Duan,
  13. and Dapeng Yu
Quantum teleportation~cite{Bennett1993} is of both fundamental interest and great practical importance in quantum information science. To date, quantum teleportation has been implemented
in various physical systems~\cite{Pirandola2015}, among which superconducting qubits are of particular practical significance as they emerge as a leading system to realize large-scale quantum computation~\cite{Arute2019,Wu2021}. Nevertheless, the number of superconducting qubits on the same chip is severely limited by the available chip size, the cooling power, and the wiring complexity. Realization of quantum teleportation and remote computation over qubits on distant superconducting chips is a key quantum communication technology to scaling up the system through a distributed quantum computational network~\cite{Gottesman1999,Eisert2000,Jiang2007,Kimble2008,Monroe2014}. However, this goal has not been realized yet in experiments due to the technical challenge of making a quantum interconnect between distant superconducting chips and the inefficient transfer of flying microwave photons over the lossy interconnects~\cite{Kurpiers2018,Axline2018,Campagne2018,Magnard2020}. Here we demonstrate deterministic teleportation of quantum states and entangling gates between distant superconducting chips connected by a 64-meter-long cable bus featuring an ultralow loss of 0.32~dB/km at cryogenic temperatures, where high fidelity remote entanglement is generated via flying microwave photons utilizing time-reversal-symmetry~\cite{Cirac1997,Korotkov2011}. Apart from the fundamental interest of teleporting macroscopic superconducting qubits over a long distance, our work lays a foundation to realization of large-scale superconducting quantum computation through a distributed computational network~\cite{Gottesman1999,Eisert2000,Jiang2007,Kimble2008,Monroe2014}.

Low-loss interconnects for modular superconducting quantum processors

  1. Jingjing Niu,
  2. Libo Zhang,
  3. Yang Liu,
  4. Jiawei Qiu,
  5. Wenhui Huang,
  6. Jiaxiang Huang,
  7. Hao Jia,
  8. Jiawei Liu,
  9. Ziyu Tao,
  10. Weiwei Wei,
  11. Yuxuan Zhou,
  12. Wanjing Zou,
  13. Yuanzhen Chen,
  14. Xiaowei Deng,
  15. Xiuhao Deng,
  16. Changkang Hu,
  17. Ling Hu,
  18. Jian Li,
  19. Dian Tan,
  20. Yuan Xu,
  21. Fei Yan,
  22. Tongxing Yan,
  23. Song Liu,
  24. Youpeng Zhong,
  25. Andrew N. Cleland,
  26. and Dapeng Yu
Scaling is now a key challenge in superconducting quantum computing. One solution is to build modular systems in which smaller-scale quantum modules are individually constructed and
calibrated, and then assembled into a larger architecture. This, however, requires the development of suitable interconnects. Here, we report low-loss interconnects based on pure aluminium coaxial cables and on-chip impedance transformers featuring quality factors up to 8.1×105, which is comparable to the performance of our transmon qubits fabricated on single-crystal sapphire substrate. We use these interconnects to link five quantum modules with inter-module quantum state transfer and Bell state fidelities up to 99\%. To benchmark the overall performance of the processor, we create maximally-entangled, multi-qubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states. The generated inter-module four-qubit GHZ state exhibits 92.0\% fidelity. We also entangle up to 12 qubits in a GHZ state with 55.8±1.8% fidelity, which is above the genuine multipartite entanglement threshold of 1/2. These results represent a viable modular approach for large-scale superconducting quantum processors.

Experimental Realization of Two Qutrits Gate with Tunable Coupling in Superconducting Circuits

  1. Kai Luo,
  2. Wenhui Huang,
  3. Ziyu Tao,
  4. Libo Zhang,
  5. Yuxuan Zhou,
  6. Ji Chu,
  7. Wuxin Liu,
  8. Biying Wang,
  9. Jiangyu Cui,
  10. Song Liu,
  11. Fei Yan,
  12. Man-Hong Yung,
  13. Yuanzhen Chen,
  14. Tongxing Yan,
  15. and Dapeng Yu
Gate-based quantum computation has been extensively investigated using quantum circuits based on qubits. In many cases, such qubits are actually made out of multilevel systems but with
only two states being used for computational purpose. While such a strategy has the advantage of being in line with the common binary logic, it in some sense wastes the ready-for-use resources in the large Hilbert space of these intrinsic multi-dimensional systems. Quantum computation beyond qubits (e.g., using qutrits or qudits) has thus been discussed and argued to be more efficient than its qubit counterpart in certain scenarios. However, one of the essential elements for qutrit-based quantum computation, two-qutrit quantum gate, remains a major challenge. In this work, we propose and demonstrate a highly efficient and scalable two-qutrit quantum gate in superconducting quantum circuits. Using a tunable coupler to control the cross-Kerr coupling between two qutrits, our scheme realizes a two-qutrit conditional phase gate with fidelity 89.3% by combining simple pulses applied to the coupler with single-qutrit operations. We further use such a two-qutrit gate to prepare an EPR state of two qutrits with a fidelity of 95.5%. Our scheme takes advantage of a tunable qutrit-qutrit coupling with a large on/off ratio. It therefore offers both high efficiency and low cross talk between qutrits, thus being friendly for scaling up. Our work constitutes an important step towards scalable qutrit-based quantum computation.

Conditional coherent control with superconducting artificial atoms

  1. Chang-Kang Hu,
  2. Jiahao Yuan,
  3. Bruno A. Veloso,
  4. Jiawei Qiu,
  5. Yuxuan Zhou,
  6. Libo Zhang,
  7. Ji Chu,
  8. Orkesh Nurbolat,
  9. Ling Hu,
  10. Jian Li,
  11. Yuan Xu,
  12. Youpeng Zhong,
  13. Song Liu,
  14. Fei Yan,
  15. Dian Tan,
  16. R. Bachelard,
  17. Alan C. Santos,
  18. C. J. Villas-Boas,
  19. and Dapeng Yu
Controlling the flow of quantum information is a fundamental task for quantum computers, which is unpractical to realize on classical devices. Coherent devices which can process quantum
states are thus required to route the quantum states yielding the information. In this paper we demonstrate experimentally the smallest quantum transistor for superconducting processors, composed of collector and emitter qubits, and the coupler. The interaction strength between the collector and emitter is controlled by tuning the frequency and the state of the gate qubit, effectively implementing a quantum switch. From the truth-table measurement (open-gate fidelity 93.38%, closed-gate fidelity 98.77%), we verify the high performance of the quantum transistor. We also show that taking into account the third energy level of the qubits is critical to achieving a high-fidelity transistor. The presented device has a strong potential for quantum information processes in superconducting platforms.

Engineering superconducting qubits to reduce quasiparticles and charge noise

  1. Xianchuang Pan,
  2. Haolan Yuan,
  3. Yuxuan Zhou,
  4. Libo Zhang,
  5. Jian Li,
  6. Song Liu,
  7. Zhi Hao Jiang,
  8. Gianluigi Catelani,
  9. Ling Hu,
  10. and Fei Yan
In any physical realization of a qubit, identifying, quantifying, and suppressing mechanisms of decoherence are important steps towards the goal of engineering a universal quantum computeror a quantum simulator. Superconducting circuits based on Josephson junctions offer flexibility in qubit design; however, their performance is adversely affected by quasiparticles (broken Cooper pairs) whose density, as observed in various systems, is considerably higher than that expected in thermal equilibrium. A full understanding of the generation mechanism and a mitigation strategy that is compatible with scalable, high-coherence devices are therefore highly desirable. Here we experimentally demonstrate how to control quasiparticle generation by downsizing the qubit structure, capping it with a metallic cover, and equipping it with suitable quasiparticle traps. We achieve record low charge-parity switching rate (<1Hz) in our aluminium devices. At the same time, the devices display improved stability with respect to discrete charging events. Our findings support the hypothesis that the generation of quasiparticles is dominated by the breaking of Cooper pairs at the junction, as a result of photon absorption mediated by the antenna-like qubit structure. We thus demonstrate a convenient approach to shape the electromagnetic environment of superconducting circuits in the sub-terahertz regime, inhibiting decoherence from quasiparticle poisoning.[/expand]

Scalable method for eliminating residual ZZ interaction between superconducting qubits

  1. Zhongchu Ni,
  2. Sai Li,
  3. Libo Zhang,
  4. Ji Chu,
  5. Jingjing Niu,
  6. Tongxing Yan,
  7. Xiuhao Deng,
  8. Ling Hu,
  9. Jian Li,
  10. Youpeng Zhong,
  11. Song Liu,
  12. Fei Yan,
  13. Yuan Xu,
  14. and Dapeng Yu
Unwanted ZZ interaction is a quantum-mechanical crosstalk phenomenon which correlates qubit dynamics and is ubiquitous in superconducting qubit system. It adversely affects the quality
of quantum operations and can be detrimental in scalable quantum information processing. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate a practically extensible approach for complete cancellation of residual ZZ interaction between fixed-frequency transmon qubits, which are known for long coherence and simple control. We apply to the intermediate coupler that connects the qubits a weak microwave drive at a properly chosen frequency in order to noninvasively induce ac Stark shift for ZZ cancellation. We verify the cancellation performance by measuring vanishing two-qubit entangling phases and ZZ correlations. In addition, we implement randomized benchmarking experiment to extract the idling gate fidelity which shows good agreement with the coherence limit, demonstrating the effectiveness of ZZ cancellation. Our method allows independent addressability of each qubit-qubit connection, and is applicable to both non-tunable and tunable coupler, promising better compatibility with future large-scale quantum processors.