Qplacer: Frequency-Aware Component Placement for Superconducting Quantum Computers

Bibliographic Details
Title: Qplacer: Frequency-Aware Component Placement for Superconducting Quantum Computers
Authors: Zhang, Junyao, Wang, Hanrui, Ding, Qi, Gu, Jiaqi, Assouly, Reouven, Oliver, William D., Han, Song, Brown, Kenneth R., Li, Hai "Helen", Chen, Yiran
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: Computer Science
Quantum Physics
Subject Terms: Quantum Physics, Computer Science - Hardware Architecture, Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control
More Details: Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) computers face a critical limitation in qubit numbers, hindering their progression towards large-scale and fault-tolerant quantum computing. A significant challenge impeding scaling is crosstalk, characterized by unwanted interactions among neighboring components on quantum chips, including qubits, resonators, and substrate. We motivate a general approach to systematically resolving multifaceted crosstalks in a limited substrate area. We propose Qplacer, a frequency-aware electrostatic-based placement framework tailored for superconducting quantum computers, to alleviate crosstalk by isolating these components in spatial and frequency domains alongside compact substrate design. Qplacer commences with a frequency assigner that ensures frequency domain isolation for qubits and resonators. It then incorporates a padding strategy and resonator partitioning for layout flexibility. Central to our approach is the conceptualization of quantum components as charged particles, enabling strategic spatial isolation through a 'frequency repulsive force' concept. Our results demonstrate that Qplacer carefully crafts the physical component layout in mitigating various crosstalk impacts while maintaining a compact substrate size. On various device topologies and NISQ benchmarks, Qplacer improves fidelity by an average of 36.7x and reduces spatial violations (susceptible to crosstalk) by an average of 12.76x, compared to classical placement engines. Regarding area optimization, compared to manual designs, Qplacer can reduce the required layout area by 2.14x on average
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2401.17450
Accession Number: edsarx.2401.17450
Database: arXiv
More Details
Description not available.