Copy of Glass Chip is Key to New Quantum Architecture

Maryland-based
IonQ has unveiled a new kind of chip in its quest to scale up its type of quantum computer technology. Its computers calculate using the quantum states of ions electromagnetically trapped in the space near a chip. Previous traps were made using silicon chipmaking processes, but the company has now switched to an evaporated glass technology—a way of constructing micrometer-scale features in fused silica glass often used to make microfluidic chips. Silicon, the company says, could not have supported IonQ’s new quantum architecture, nor could it have enabled the new architecture’s stable traps that can handle multiple chains of ion-based qubits.

Ultimately, IonQ executives say, the glass chip’s reconfigurable chains of ions will allow for computers with qubits that number in the triple digits.

«The purpose of an ion trap is to move ions around with precision, hold them in the environment, and get out of the way of the quantum operation,» explains
Jason Amini, who led the evaporated glass trap team at IonQ. The 3D glass and metal structure Amini’s team constructed does all three better than its silicon chips could, Amini says. Stray electric fields from charge on the silicon chip could destabilize the ions’ delicate quantum states, reducing the fidelity of quantum computation. But the evaporated glass design «hides any material that could hold charge,» he says. The effect is a more stable trap that computes better.

Another advantage, Amini says, is that the trap could be shaped to «get out of the way» of quantum operations. In an ion trap computer the ions’ quantum states are manipulated by zapping them with lasers. «We have to bring a lot of laser beams over the surface,» says Amini. The glass chip is «shaped to allow lasers to come through and address the device.»

IonQ previously had silicon ion traps constructed at
Sandia National Laboratory in New Mexico. But IonQ wanted more control over the technology and the ability to iterate designs faster, says CEO Peter Chapman.

With the evaporated glass ion trap in hand, IonQ proceeded with a demonstration of their new quantum computing scheme, which Chapman calls the industry’s first «reconfigurable multicore quantum architecture», or RMQA. But don’t look for too many parallels between field programmable gate arrays and multicore CPUs.

In IonQ’s demonstration it works like this: The trap holds four separate chains of 16 ions in a line. (Four cores in the multicore computing analogy.) Each chain can be moved into position to be manipulated by the lasers, altering their quantum state or entangling groups of ions so their quantum states are linked. «Each chain is, by itself, a quantum computer,» says Chapman. In addition, two chains can be brought together to entangle qubits across the cores (the reconfiguration part) until eventually all the qubits can be linked to perform big, complex quantum operations.

It’s not perfect, of course. Out of 16 ions, the technology produces 12 good qubits, Chapman explains. So IonQ’s latest demonstration produce 48 qubits. But it is easily expanded by lengthening the trap. And, because this is quantum computing, a little expansion goes a long way, adding substantially more capability with each added qubit.

«The architecture allows you to relatively easily expand to hundreds of qubits on a single chip,» says Chapman.

The next big leap will come from photonic interconnects IonQ is developing to link qubits on one chip to those on another. «Once you do entanglement, distance no longer matters,» says Chapman. «Whether or not it’s multiple chains on a chip or one chip to another, it all acts as if it’s one big quantum computer.»

This post was updated on 25 August to correct a math error.

Source: IEEE Semiconductors