Spectator Errors in Tunable Coupling Architectures

  1. D. M. Zajac,
  2. J. Stehlik,
  3. D. L. Underwood,
  4. T. Phung,
  5. J. Blair,
  6. S. Carnevale,
  7. D. Klaus,
  8. G. A. Keefe,
  9. A. Carniol,
  10. M. Kumph,
  11. Matthias Steffen,
  12. and O. E. Dial
The addition of tunable couplers to superconducting quantum architectures offers significant advantages for scaling compared to fixed coupling approaches. In principle, tunable couplers
allow for exact cancellation of qubit-qubit coupling through the interference of two parallel coupling pathways between qubits. However, stray microwave couplings can introduce additional pathways which complicate the interference effect. Here we investigate the primary spectator induced errors of the bus below qubit (BBQ) architecture in a six qubit device. We identify the key design parameters which inhibit ideal cancellation and demonstrate that dynamic cancellation pulses can further mitigate spectator errors.

Quantum crosstalk cancellation for fast entangling gates and improved multi-qubit performance

  1. K. X. Wei,
  2. E. Magesan,
  3. I. Lauer,
  4. S. Srinivasan,
  5. D. F. Bogorin,
  6. S. Carnevale,
  7. G. A. Keefe,
  8. Y. Kim,
  9. D. Klaus,
  10. W. Landers,
  11. N. Sundaresan,
  12. C. Wang,
  13. E. J. Zhang,
  14. M. Steffen,
  15. O. E. Dial,
  16. D. C. McKay,
  17. and A. Kandala
Quantum computers built with superconducting artificial atoms already stretch the limits of their classical counterparts. While the lowest energy states of these artificial atoms serve
as the qubit basis, the higher levels are responsible for both a host of attractive gate schemes as well as generating undesired interactions. In particular, when coupling these atoms to generate entanglement, the higher levels cause shifts in the computational levels that leads to unwanted ZZ quantum crosstalk. Here, we present a novel technique to manipulate the energy levels and mitigate this crosstalk via a simultaneous AC Stark effect on coupled qubits. This breaks a fundamental deadlock between qubit-qubit coupling and crosstalk, leading to a 90ns CNOT with a gate error of (0.19 ± 0.02) % and the demonstration of a novel CZ gate with fixed-coupling single-junction transmon qubits. Furthermore, we show a definitive improvement in circuit performance with crosstalk cancellation over seven qubits, demonstrating the scalability of the technique. This work paves the way for superconducting hardware with faster gates and greatly improved multi-qubit circuit fidelities.

Suppressed crosstalk between two-junction superconducting qubits with mode-selective exchange coupling

  1. A. D. K. Finck,
  2. S. Carnevale,
  3. D. Klaus,
  4. C. Scerbo,
  5. J. Blair,
  6. T.G. McConkey,
  7. C. Kurter,
  8. A. Carniol,
  9. G. Keefe,
  10. M. Kumph,
  11. and O. E. Dial
Fixed-frequency qubits can suffer from always-on interactions that inhibit independent control. Here, we address this issue by experimentally demonstrating a superconducting architecture
using qubits that comprise of two capacitively-shunted Josephson junctions connected in series. Historically known as tunable coupling qubits (TCQs), such two-junction qubits support two modes with distinct frequencies and spatial symmetries. By selectively coupling only one type of mode and using the other as our computational basis, we greatly suppress crosstalk between the data modes while permitting all-microwave two-qubit gates.

Tunable Coupling Architecture for Fixed-frequency Transmons

  1. J. Stehlik,
  2. D. M. Zajac,
  3. D. L. Underwood,
  4. T. Phung,
  5. J. Blair,
  6. S. Carnevale,
  7. D. Klaus,
  8. G. A. Keefe,
  9. A. Carniol,
  10. M. Kumph,
  11. Matthias Steffen,
  12. and O. E. Dial
Implementation of high-fidelity two-qubit operations is a key ingredient for scalable quantum error correction. In superconducting qubit architectures tunable buses have been explored
as a means to higher fidelity gates. However, these buses introduce new pathways for leakage. Here we present a modified tunable bus architecture appropriate for fixed-frequency qubits in which the adiabaticity restrictions on gate speed are reduced. We characterize this coupler on a range of two-qubit devices achieving a maximum gate fidelity of 99.85%. We further show the calibration is stable over one day.