PIQC: Scalable Distributed Quantum Computing via Photonic Integration of Designed Molecular Quantum Nodes
Anna Aubele, Gregor Bayer, Tim R. Eichhorn, Tobias Hahn, Fedor Jelezko, Paul Mentzel, Philipp Neumann, Matthias Pfender, Martin B. Plenio, Alex Retzker, Simon Roggors, Alon Salhov, Jochen Scharpf, Tobias A. Schaub, Nico Striegler, Thomas Unden, Julia Zolg, Sella Brosh

TL;DR
This paper introduces PIQC, a scalable distributed quantum computing architecture using molecular quantum nodes integrated with photonic technology, enabling fault-tolerant quantum computation.
Contribution
The work presents a novel architecture combining molecular qubits, nuclear registers, hybrid photonic integration, and advanced error correction for scalable quantum computing.
Findings
Designed molecular qubits with millisecond coherence times.
High-fidelity electron-nuclear gates achieved in synthetic molecular structures.
Protocols tolerant to up to 70% photon loss demonstrated.
Abstract
There is a growing consensus that large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC) necessitates high-fidelity photonic interconnects to overcome the scaling limits of monolithic architectures. However, most current platforms were not originally designed for native photonic connectivity and require significant engineering overhead. To overcome these fundamental hardware limitations, we recently introduced a rationally designed organic molecule that serves as an ideal quantum node, featuring a robust qubit-photon interface (QPI) and a long-lived nuclear-spin register. In this work, we present PIQC (Photonic Integrated Quantum Circuits), a distributed architecture designed to scale these molecular nodes into a functional quantum computer. The PIQC framework integrates five mutually reinforcing innovations: (i) Designer molecular qubits, i.e. carbene molecules in an isosteric host that…
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