INJEQT: Improved Magic-State Injection Protocol for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Extractor Architectures
Sayam Sethi, Sahil Khan, Aditi Awasthi, Abhinav Anand, Jonathan Mark Baker

TL;DR
INJEQT is a novel protocol that significantly reduces error rates and time overhead in fault-tolerant quantum architectures by optimizing T-state injection using auxiliary codes and parallel preparation strategies.
Contribution
This work introduces INJEQT, a 2-factory design that lowers error rates and improves efficiency of T-state injection in FTQC architectures, addressing a key bottleneck.
Findings
Reduces overall error rates by up to 22 times.
Improves wall-clock time by up to 13 times.
Reduces space-time cost by up to 7.2 times.
Abstract
Near-term FTQC system designs are constrained by limited error budgets and largely sequential execution of non-Clifford gates. As a result, reducing the number of the most-error prone instructions becomes critical for successful program execution. In this work, we study the extractor architecture, a recently proposed FTQC design that enables universal quantum computation on spatially-efficient QEC codes such as the BB code family. In these architectures, over of the total program error arises from the synthillation process, which involves -state preparation and injection to implement non-Clifford gates. We observe that standard Rz synthillation requires multiple sequential -state injections, each incurring an inter-module measurements, the most expensive instruction in the architecture, which cumulatively dominate the overall error budget. To…
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