Cryogenic Thermal Modeling of Microwave High Density Signaling
Naomi Raicu (1), Tom Hogan (2), Xian Wu (3), Mehrnoosh Vahidpour (3), David Snow (3), Matthew Hollister (4), Mark Field (3) ((1) University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, (2) Quantum Design, Inc., (3) Rigetti Computing, (4) Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)

TL;DR
This paper models the cryogenic thermal loads of microwave control lines in superconducting quantum computers, providing insights into maximum scalable qubit counts considering thermal constraints.
Contribution
It offers a detailed thermal and electrical characterization of coaxial cables and integrates these into a cryogenic model to estimate scalable qubit limits.
Findings
Maximum practical qubits ~140 considering engineering margins
Thermal load increases with number of control lines and qubits
Provides a thermal model for designing scalable quantum processors
Abstract
Superconducting quantum computers require microwave control lines running from room temperature to the mixing chamber of a dilution refrigerator. Adding more lines without preliminary thermal modeling to make predictions risks overwhelming the cooling power at each thermal stage. In this paper, we investigate the thermal load of SC-086/50-SCN-CN semi-rigid coaxial cable, which is commonly used for the control and readout lines of a superconducting quantum computer, as we increase the number of lines to a quantum processor. We investigate the makeup of the coaxial cables, verify the materials and dimensions, and experimentally measure the total thermal conductivity of a single cable as a function of the temperature from cryogenic to room temperature values. We also measure the cryogenic DC electrical resistance of the inner conductor as a function of temperature, allowing for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
