IEEE Transactions on Quantum Engineering (Jan 2023)
Design and Analysis of Digital Communication Within an SoC-Based Control System for Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing
Abstract
Electronic control systems used for quantum computing have become increasingly complex as multiple qubit technologies employ larger numbers of qubits with higher fidelity target. Whereas the control systems for different technologies share some similarities, parameters, such as pulse duration, throughput, real-time feedback, and latency requirements, vary widely depending on the qubit type. In this article, we evaluate the performance of modern system-on-chip (SoC) architectures in meeting the control demands associated with performing quantum gates on trapped-ion qubits, particularly focusing on communication within the SoC. A principal focus of this article is the data transfer latency and throughput of several high-speed on-chip mechanisms on Xilinx multiprocessor SoCs, including those that utilize direct memory access (DMA). They are measured and evaluated to determine an upper bound on the time required to reconfigure a gate parameter. Worst-case and average-case bandwidth requirements for a custom gate sequencer core are compared with the experimental results. The lowest variability, highest throughput data-transfer mechanism is DMA between the real-time processing unit (RPU) and the programmable logic, where bandwidths up to 19.2 GB/s are possible. For context, this enables the reconfiguration of qubit gates in less than 2 $\mu$s, comparable to the fastest gate time. Though this article focuses on trapped-ion control systems, the gate abstraction scheme and measured communication rates are applicable to a broad range of quantum computing technologies.
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