Crosstalk-Robust Dynamical Decoupling for Bipartite-Topology Quantum Processors
ORAL
Abstract
We introduce a protocol that modifies dynamical decoupling (DD) sequences to be robust to static ZZ crosstalk when implemented with bounded control on two-colorable qubit topologies. The protocol, which relies on modifications to the pulse timing, can be applied to any sequence with equidistant π-pulses. We motivate the method theoretically via suppression conditions identified through time-dependent perturbation theory. Theoretical findings are supported by demonstrations of widely studied sequences on several superconducting qubit devices offered by the IBM Quantum Platform. Using up to 20 qubits on fixed-coupler devices, we observe at least a 3x improvement in the fidelity decay rate via our approach when compared to non-robust DD variants. In addition, we leverage our approach to assess the impact of ZZ errors on tunable-coupler devices. We find that ZZ-robust sequences perform nearly equivalent to non-robust DD, affirming the reduced impact of such errors in a tunable-coupler architecture. Nevertheless, our demonstrations indicate that fixed-coupler devices, when subject to DD-protection, can outperform tunable-coupler devices. Our method broadens the scope of practical DD protocols: with modest overhead and a reasonable constraint on the qubit topology, the method attains significant performance improvements on modern quantum computing devices.
*This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Accelerated Research in Quantum Computing under Award Number DE-SC0020316 and DE-SC0025509. EH and XW acknowledge support from NSF CAREER Award CCF-1942837, a Sloan Research Fellowship. GQ acknowledges support from ARO MURI grant W911NF-18-1-0218. This research used resources of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, which is a DOE Office of Science User Facility supported under Contract DE-AC05-00OR22725.
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Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2506.18010
Presenters
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Ethan Hickman
- University of Maryland College Park
- University of Maryland, College Park