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Surface code error correction on a defective lattice

Nagayama, Shota; Fowler, Austin G.; Horsman, Dominic; Devitt, Simon J.; Meter, Rodney Van

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Authors

Shota Nagayama

Austin G. Fowler

Dominic Horsman

Simon J. Devitt

Rodney Van Meter



Abstract

The yield of physical qubits fabricated in the laboratory is much lower than that of classical transistors in production semiconductor fabrication. Actual implementations of quantum computers will be susceptible to loss in the form of physically faulty qubits. Though these physical faults must negatively affect the computation, we can deal with them by adapting error-correction schemes. In this paper we have simulated statically placed single-fault lattices and lattices with randomly placed faults at functional qubit yields of 80%, 90%, and 95%, showing practical performance of a defective surface code by employing actual circuit constructions and realistic errors on every gate, including identity gates. We extend Stace et al's superplaquettes solution against dynamic losses for the surface code to handle static losses such as physically faulty qubits [1]. The single-fault analysis shows that a static loss at the periphery of the lattice has less negative effect than a static loss at the center. The randomly faulty analysis shows that 95% yield is good enough to build a large-scale quantum computer. The local gate error rate threshold is $\sim 0.3 \% $, and a code distance of seven suppresses the residual error rate below the original error rate at $p=0.1 \% $. 90% yield is also good enough when we discard badly fabricated quantum computation chips, while 80% yield does not show enough error suppression even when discarding 90% of the chips. We evaluated several metrics for predicting chip performance, and found that the average of the product of the number of data qubits and the cycle time of a stabilizer measurement of stabilizers gave the strongest correlation with logical error rates. Our analysis will help with selecting usable quantum computation chips from among the pool of all fabricated chips.

Citation

Nagayama, S., Fowler, A. G., Horsman, D., Devitt, S. J., & Meter, R. V. (2017). Surface code error correction on a defective lattice. New Journal of Physics, 19(2), Article 023050. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa5918

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 12, 2017
Online Publication Date Feb 23, 2017
Publication Date Feb 23, 2017
Deposit Date Jul 25, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jul 25, 2017
Journal New Journal of Physics
Electronic ISSN 1367-2630
Publisher IOP Publishing
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 19
Issue 2
Article Number 023050
DOI https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/aa5918
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1381158

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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright Statement
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.





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