npj Quantum Information (Mar 2024)

Pipeline quantum processor architecture for silicon spin qubits

  • S. M. Patomäki,
  • M. F. Gonzalez-Zalba,
  • M. A. Fogarty,
  • Z. Cai,
  • S. C. Benjamin,
  • J. J. L. Morton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-024-00823-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract We propose a quantum processor architecture, the qubit ‘pipeline’, in which run-time scales additively as functions of circuit depth and run repetitions. Run-time control is applied globally, reducing the complexity of control and interconnect resources. This simplification is achieved by shuttling N-qubit states through a large layered physical array of structures which realise quantum logic gates in stages. Thus, the circuit depth corresponds to the number of layers of structures. Subsequent N-qubit states are ‘pipelined’ densely through the structures to efficiently wield the physical resources for repeated runs. Pipelining thus lends itself to noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) applications, such as variational quantum eigensolvers, which require numerous repetitions of the same or similar calculations. We illustrate the architecture by describing a realisation in the naturally high-density and scalable silicon spin qubit platform, which includes a universal gate set of sufficient fidelity under realistic assumptions of qubit variability.