Near-Term n to k Distillation Protocols Using Graph Codes

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Kenneth Goodenough (TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre, TU Delft - QID/Vardoyan Group)

S.W. De Bone (TU Delft - QID/Elkouss Group, TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre)

Vaishnavi Addala (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)

Stefan Krastanov (University of Massachusetts Amherst)

Sarah Jansen (Universiteit van Amsterdam, Student TU Delft)

DC Gijswijt (TU Delft - Discrete Mathematics and Optimization)

D. Elkouss (TU Delft - Quantum Computer Science, TU Delft - QuTech Advanced Research Centre)

Research Institute
QuTech Advanced Research Centre
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSAC.2024.3380094
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Institute
QuTech Advanced Research Centre
Issue number
7
Volume number
42
Pages (from-to)
1830-1849
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Abstract

Noisy hardware forms one of the main hurdles to the realization of a near-term quantum internet. Distillation protocols allows one to overcome this noise at the cost of an increased overhead. We consider here an experimentally relevant class of distillation protocols, which distill <italic>n</italic> to <italic>k</italic> end-to-end entangled pairs using bilocal Clifford operations, a single round of communication and a possible final local operation depending on the observed measurement outcomes. In the case of permutationally invariant depolarizing noise on the input states, we find a correspondence between these distillation protocols and graph codes. We leverage this correspondence to find provably optimal distillation protocols in this class for several tasks important for the quantum internet. This correspondence allows us to investigate use cases for so-called non-trivial measurement syndromes. Furthermore, we detail a recipe to construct the circuit used for the distillation protocol given a graph code. We use this to find circuits of short depth and small number of two-qubit gates. Additionally, we develop a black-box circuit optimization algorithm, and find that both approaches yield comparable circuits. Finally, we investigate the teleportation of encoded states and find protocols which jointly improve the rate and fidelities with respect to prior art.