Quantum computers are currently one of the most intriguing prospects of quantum technology. A functional quantum computer will have significantly increased computing power and will be able to complex tasks that conventional computers cannot handle. Like in conventional computers, the term quantum bit or qubit refers to the basic unit in quantum information. Presently, the most advanced approaches for realizing them are superconducting circuits and trapped ions. While the former stores quantum information in electronic components, the latter, in different energy levels of single atoms.
By using superconducting circuits, researchers recently succeeded in demonstrating that quantum computers are able to perform highly specialized tasks that conventional computers cannot handle. However, in contrast to any other approach, ions produce significantly lower error rates in operations. In order to reduce error rates even further and provide reliable operations much faster, researchers at Leibniz University Hannover and Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) have now developed a new method. Their findings were published in the latest issue of the scientific journal Physical Review Letters.
In their approach, ions are trapped under vacuum by using electric fields above a chip structure. Qubit operations are implemented by sending microwave signals through special conductor loops embedded in the chip structure. Usually, logic operations are carried out via extremely carefully controlled laser beams. Using microwave fields has the advantage that they are both relatively easy to control and a highly mature technology since they are omnipresent in numerous products from planes to mobile phones.
Within the scope of the study, researchers investigated the most efficient methods for operations on qubits. This is also a highly relevant issue in conventional computer chips, as the amount of energy necessary per operation determines how many of them can be processed per second before the chip starts to overheat. Regarding ion-trap microwave quantum computers, the researchers succeeded in demonstrating that specifically shaped microwave pulses, where the field is turned on and off smoothly, produce error rates 100 times lower than those where the fields are simply switched on and off—with the same energy input and despite the presence of noise.
For this purpose, the team introduced additional and carefully controlled noise into the experiment and determined operation errors for varying levels of injected noise as well as for both pulse shapes. According to Giorgio Zarantonello, one of the authors of the study, this made a huge difference for their experiment. In the past, finding suitable operations involved much trial and error as well as a long optimization process before catching a moment with very little noise. All they have to do now is to switch on the experiment and it works.
After demonstrating that basic operations with low error rates are feasible, the researchers now aim to transfer their findings to tasks that are more complex. The intention is to achieve less than one error in every ten thousand operations, which is when scaling to a large number of qubits becomes efficient. For this task, they have already developed a patented micro-fabrication technology that supports the storage and manipulation of a large number of qubits in a chip structures.
Click here to view the published paper.