Suppressing Coherent Two-Qubit Errors via Dynamical Decoupling

  1. Jiawei Qiu,
  2. Yuxuan Zhou,
  3. Chang-Kang Hu,
  4. Jiahao Yuan,
  5. Libo Zhang,
  6. Ji Chu,
  7. Wenhui Huang,
  8. Weiyang Liu,
  9. Kai Luo,
  10. Zhongchu Ni,
  11. Xianchuang Pan,
  12. Zhixuan Yang,
  13. Yimeng Zhang,
  14. Yuanzhen Chen,
  15. Xiu-Hao Deng,
  16. Ling Hu,
  17. Jian Li,
  18. Jingjing Niu,
  19. Yuan Xu,
  20. Tongxing Yan,
  21. Youpeng Zhong,
  22. Song Liu,
  23. Fei Yan,
  24. and Dapeng Yu
Scalable quantum information processing requires the ability to tune multi-qubit interactions. This makes the precise manipulation of quantum states particularly difficult for multi-qubit
interactions because tunability unavoidably introduces sensitivity to fluctuations in the tuned parameters, leading to erroneous multi-qubit gate operations. The performance of quantum algorithms may be severely compromised by coherent multi-qubit errors. It is therefore imperative to understand how these fluctuations affect multi-qubit interactions and, more importantly, to mitigate their influence. In this study, we demonstrate how to implement dynamical-decoupling techniques to suppress the two-qubit analogue of the dephasing on a superconducting quantum device featuring a compact tunable coupler, a trending technology that enables the fast manipulation of qubit–qubit interactions. The pure-dephasing time shows an up to ~14 times enhancement on average when using robust sequences. The results are in good agreement with the noise generated from room-temperature circuits. Our study further reveals the decohering processes associated with tunable couplers and establishes a framework to develop gates and sequences robust against two-qubit errors.

Phase sensitive Landau-Zener-Stückelberg interference in superconducting quantum circuit

  1. Zhi-Xuan Yang,
  2. Yi-Meng Zhang,
  3. Yu-Xuan Zhou,
  4. Li-Bo Zhang,
  5. Fei Yan,
  6. Song Liu,
  7. Yuan Xu,
  8. and Jian Li
Superconducting circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED) architecture composed of superconducting qubit and resonator is a powerful platform for exploring quantum physics and quantum information
processing. By employing techniques developed for superconducting quantum computing, we experimentally investigate phase-sensitive Landau-Zener-Stückelberg (LZS) interference phenomena in a circuit QED. Our experiments cover a large range of LZS transition parameters, and demonstrate the LZS induced Rabi-like oscillation as well as phase-dependent steady-state population.

High-fidelity, high-scalability two-qubit gate scheme for superconducting qubits

  1. Yuan Xu,
  2. Ji Chu,
  3. Jiahao Yuan,
  4. Jiawei Qiu,
  5. Yuxuan Zhou,
  6. Libo Zhang,
  7. Xinsheng Tan,
  8. Yang Yu,
  9. Song Liu,
  10. Jian Li,
  11. Fei Yan,
  12. and Dapeng Yu
High-quality two-qubit gate operations are crucial for scalable quantum information processing. Often, the gate fidelity is compromised when the system becomes more integrated. Therefore,
a low-error-rate, easy-to-scale two-qubit gate scheme is highly desirable. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a new two-qubit gate scheme that exploits fixed-frequency qubits and a tunable coupler in a superconducting quantum circuit. The scheme requires less control lines, reduces crosstalk effect, simplifies calibration procedures, yet produces a controlled-Z gate in 30ns with a high fidelity of 99.5%. Error analysis shows that gate errors are mostly coherence-limited. Our demonstration paves the way for large-scale implementation of high-fidelity quantum operations.

Spin wave based tunable switch between superconducting flux qubits

  1. Shaojie Yuan,
  2. Chuanpu Liu,
  3. Jilei Chen,
  4. Song Liu,
  5. Jin Lan,
  6. Haiming Yu,
  7. Jiansheng Wu,
  8. Fei Yan,
  9. Man-Hong Yung,
  10. Jiang Xiao,
  11. Liang Jiang,
  12. and Dapeng Yu
Quantum computing hardware has received world-wide attention and made considerable progress recently. YIG thin film have spin wave (magnon) modes with low dissipation and reliable control
for quantum information processing. However, the coherent coupling between a quantum device and YIG thin film has yet been demonstrated. Here, we propose a scheme to achieve strong coupling between superconducting flux qubits and magnon modes in YIG thin film. Unlike the direct N−−√ enhancement factor in coupling to the Kittel mode or other spin ensembles, with N the total number of spins, an additional spatial dependent phase factor needs to be considered when the qubits are magnetically coupled with the magnon modes of finite wavelength. To avoid undesirable cancelation of coupling caused by the symmetrical boundary condition, a CoFeB thin layer is added to one side of the YIG thin film to break the symmetry. Our numerical simulation demonstrates avoided crossing and coherent transfer of quantum information between the flux qubits and the standing spin waves in YIG thin films. We show that the YIG thin film can be used as a tunable switch between two flux qubits, which have modified shape with small direct inductive coupling between them. Our results manifest that it is possible to couple flux qubits while suppressing undesirable cross-talk.

Simulation of Higher-Order Topological Phases and Related Topological Phase Transitions in a Superconducting Qubit

  1. Jingjing Niu,
  2. Tongxing Yan,
  3. Yuxuan Zhou,
  4. Ziyu Tao,
  5. Xiaole Li,
  6. Weiyang Liu,
  7. Libo Zhang,
  8. Song Liu,
  9. Zhongbo Yan,
  10. Yuanzhen Chen,
  11. and Dapeng Yu
Higher-order topological insulators (TIs) and superconductors (TSCs) give rise to new bulk and boundary physics, as well as new classes of topological phase transitions. While higher-order
TIs have been actively studied on many platforms, the experimental study of higher-order TSCs has thus far been greatly hindered due to the scarcity of material realizations. To advance the study of higher-order TSCs, in this work we carry out the simulation of a two-dimensional spinless second-order TSC belonging to the symmetry class D in a superconducting qubit. Owing to the great flexibility and controllability of the quantum simulator, we observe the realization of higher-order topology directly through the measurement of the pseudo-spin texture in momentum space of the bulk for the first time, in sharp contrast to previous experiments based on the detection of gapless boundary modes in real space. Also through the measurement of the evolution of pseudo-spin texture with parameters, we further observe novel topological phase transitions from the second-order TSC to the trivial superconductor, as well as to the first-order TSC with nonzero Chern number. Our work sheds new light on the study of higher-order topological phases and topological phase transitions.