npj Quantum Information (Sep 2021)

Entanglement across separate silicon dies in a modular superconducting qubit device

  • Alysson Gold,
  • J. P. Paquette,
  • Anna Stockklauser,
  • Matthew J. Reagor,
  • M. Sohaib Alam,
  • Andrew Bestwick,
  • Nicolas Didier,
  • Ani Nersisyan,
  • Feyza Oruc,
  • Armin Razavi,
  • Ben Scharmann,
  • Eyob A. Sete,
  • Biswajit Sur,
  • Davide Venturelli,
  • Cody James Winkleblack,
  • Filip Wudarski,
  • Mike Harburn,
  • Chad Rigetti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-021-00484-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Assembling future large-scale quantum computers out of smaller, specialized modules promises to simplify a number of formidable science and engineering challenges. One of the primary challenges in developing a modular architecture is in engineering high fidelity, low-latency quantum interconnects between modules. Here we demonstrate a modular solid state architecture with deterministic inter-module coupling between four physically separate, interchangeable superconducting qubit integrated circuits, achieving two-qubit gate fidelities as high as 99.1 ± 0.5% and 98.3 ± 0.3% for iSWAP and CZ entangling gates, respectively. The quality of the inter-module entanglement is further confirmed by a demonstration of Bell-inequality violation for disjoint pairs of entangled qubits across the four separate silicon dies. Having proven out the fundamental building blocks, this work provides the technological foundations for a modular quantum processor: technology which will accelerate near-term experimental efforts and open up new paths to the fault-tolerant era for solid state qubit architectures.