A co-design methodology for scalable quantum processors and their classical electronic interface

Conference Paper (2018)
Author(s)

J.P.G. Van Dijk (TU Delft - OLD QCD/Charbon Lab, Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft)

A. Vladimircscu (TU Delft - OLD QCD/Charbon Lab, Institut Supérieur d’Electronique de Paris,, University of California)

M. Babaie (TU Delft - Electronics)

Edoardo Charbon (TU Delft - OLD QCD/Charbon Lab, Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft, TU Delft - (OLD)Applied Quantum Architectures, Intel Corporation, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)

F. Sebastiano (TU Delft - (OLD)Applied Quantum Architectures)

Research Group
OLD QCD/Charbon Lab
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.23919/DATE.2018.8342072
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Research Group
OLD QCD/Charbon Lab
Volume number
2018-January
Pages (from-to)
573-576
ISBN (electronic)
978-398192631-6

Abstract

A quantum computer fundamentally comprises a quantum processor and a classical controller. The classical electronic controller is used to correct and manipulate the qubits, the core components of a quantum processor. To enable quantum computers scalable to millions of qubits, as required in practical applications, the simultaneous optimization of both the classical electronic and quantum systems is needed. In this paper, a co-design methodology is proposed for obtaining an optimized qubit performance while considering practical trade-offs in the control circuits, such as power consumption, complexity, and cost. The SPINE (SPIN Emulator) toolset is introduced for the co-design and co-optimization of electronic/quantum systems. It comprises a circuit simulator enhanced with a Verilog-A model emulating the quantum behavior of single-electron spin qubits. Design examples show the effectiveness of the proposed methodology in the optimization, design and verification of a whole electronic/quantum system.

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