Tunable coupling of widely separated superconducting qubits: A possible application towards a modular quantum device
Peng Zhao, Yingshan Zhang, Guangming Xue, Yirong Jin, and Haifeng Yu

TL;DR
This paper proposes a modular architecture for superconducting qubits with tunable long-range coupling, enabling high-fidelity entanglement between modules separated by centimeters, facilitating scalable quantum computing.
Contribution
It introduces a conceptual design utilizing a tunable bus and bridge modules for long-range coupling between superconducting qubit modules, advancing modular quantum processor development.
Findings
Potential for sub-100-ns two-qubit gates between separated modules
Long-range coupling comparable in performance to intra-module gates
Feasibility of multi-chip stacked quantum processors using this scheme
Abstract
Besides striving to assemble more and more qubits in a single monolithic quantum device, taking a modular design strategy may mitigate numerous engineering challenges for achieving large-scalable quantum processors with superconducting qubits. Nevertheless, a major challenge in the modular quantum device is how to realize high-fidelity entanglement operations on qubits housed in different modules while preserving the desired isolation between modules. In this work, we propose a conceptual design of a modular quantum device, where nearby modules are spatially separated by centimeters. In principle, each module can contain tens of superconducting qubits, and can be separately fabricated, characterized, packaged, and replaced. By introducing a bridge module between nearby qubit modules and taking the coupling scheme utilizing a tunable bus, tunable coupling of qubits that are housed in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum and electron transport phenomena · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
