QuFI: a Quantum Fault Injector to Measure the Reliability of Qubits and Quantum Circuits
Daniel Oliveira, Edoardo Giusto, Emanuele Dri, Nadir Casciola, Betis, Baheri, Qiang Guan, Bartolomeo Montrucchio, Paolo Rech

TL;DR
This paper introduces QuFI, a flexible quantum fault injector that models radiation-induced faults in qubits, enabling the assessment of quantum circuit reliability on simulators and real machines.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel fault injection framework for quantum circuits that models radiation faults as phase shifts and supports multiple fault injections on real quantum hardware.
Findings
Over 285 million injections on Qiskit simulator
53,000 injections on real IBM quantum machines
Multi-qubit faults are more critical than single faults
Abstract
Quantum computing is a new technology that is expected to revolutionize the computation paradigm in the next few years. Qubits exploit the quantum physics proprieties to increase the parallelism and speed of computation. Unfortunately, besides being intrinsically noisy, qubits have also been shown to be highly susceptible to external sources of faults, such as ionizing radiation. The latest discoveries highlight a much higher radiation sensitivity of qubits than traditional transistors and identify a much more complex fault model than bit-flip. We propose a framework to identify the quantum circuits sensitivity to radiation-induced faults and the probability for a fault in a qubit to propagate to the output. Based on the latest studies and radiation experiments performed on real quantum machines, we model the transient faults in a qubit as a phase shift with a parametrized magnitude.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Advancements in Semiconductor Devices and Circuit Design
