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Driving a two-qubit gate between transmons using digitally reconfigurable cryogenic CMOS control electronics.

ORAL

Abstract

Control electronics composed of CMOS circuits are of growing interest for next generation quantum computing systems. Here we present experimental results on a two-qubit cross resonance gate generated from a CMOS control chip, that is thermalized to the 4K stage of a dilution refrigerator. This low power digitally reconfigurable arbitrary waveform generator (DRAWG) is fabricated on 14 nm FinFET technology and has an observed power dissipation of 23 mW per channel while control is active. It uses a single side band direct conversion topology to generate output frequencies between 4.5 and 5.5 GHz, and a maximum power output of -18 dBm. The cryo-DRAWG was used to generate the single and two-qubit control pulses necessary for calibrating and characterizing a cross-resonance gate between transmon qubits. Measurement results include Hamiltonian tomography, qubit lifetime and dephasing, as well as single-qubit and two-qubit randomized benchmarking (RB). We demonstrate an error-per-Clifford rate of ~5E-4 for 1Q RB and ~2E-2 for 2Q RB.

Presenters

  • Joseph A Glick

    IBM Quantum

Authors

  • Joseph A Glick

    IBM Quantum

  • Devin L Underwood

    IBM TJ Watson Research Center, IBM Quantum

  • Ken Inoue

    IBM Quantum

  • Sudipto Chakraborty

    IBM Quantum

  • David Frank

    IBM Quantum

  • Kevin Tien

    IBM Quantum

  • Pat Rosno

    IBM Quantum

  • Mark Yeck

    IBM Quantum

  • Raphael Robertazzi

    IBM Quantum

  • John Timmerwilke

    IBM Quantum

  • Chris W Baks

    IBM Quantum

  • Donald S Bethune

    IBM Quantum

  • Thomas Fox

    IBM Quantum

  • Vincent Diluoffo

    IBM Quantum

  • Scott Lekuch

    IBM Quantum

  • John F Bulzachelli

    IBM Quantum

  • Daniel Ramierez

    IBM Quantum

  • Rajiv V Joshi

    IBM Quantum

  • Brian Gaucher

    IBM Quantum

  • Daniel J Friedman

    IBM Quantum