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Beyond Qubits: University of Sydney’s Quantum Team Say They’ve Taken Huge Step Forward In Scaling Up Quantum Computers

University of Sydney
University of Sydney
The control platform with the cryogenic chip to control thousands of qubits. The invention will help quantum engineers overcome the input-output bottleneck preventing quantum machines scaling to useful devices.
Through the Microsoft partnership with the University, Professor David Reilly and colleagues have invented a device that operates at 40 times colder than deep space to directly control thousands of qubits, the building blocks of quantum technology.

Scientists and engineers at the University of Sydney and Microsoft Corporation have opened the next chapter in quantum technology with the invention of a single chip that can generate control signals for thousands of qubits, the building blocks of quantum computers.

“To realize the potential of quantum computing, machines will need to operate thousands if not millions of qubits,” said Professor David Reilly, a designer of the chip who holds a joint position with Microsoft and the University of Sydney.

“The world’s biggest quantum computers currently operate with just 50 or so qubits,” he said. “This small scale is partly because of limits to the physical architecture that control the qubits.”

“Our new chip puts an end to those limits.”

The results have been published in Nature Electronics.

Most quantum systems require quantum bits, or qubits, to operate at temperatures close to absolute zero (-273.15 degrees). This is to prevent them losing their ‘quantumness’, the character of matter or light that quantum computers need to perform their specialized computations.

In order for quantum devices to do anything useful, they need instructions. That means sending and receiving electronic signals to and from the qubits. With current quantum architecture, that involves a lot of wires.

“Current machines create a beautiful array of wires to control the signals; they look like an inverted gilded birds’ nest or chandelier. They’re pretty, but fundamentally impractical. It means we can’t scale the machines up to perform useful calculations. There is a real input-output bottleneck,” said Reilly, also a Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre for Engineered Quantum Systems (EQUS) .

“This changes everything for quantum computing.”

Microsoft Senior Hardware Engineer, Dr Kushal Das, a joint inventor of the chip, said: “Our device does away with all those cables. With just two wires carrying information as input, it can generate control signals for thousands of qubits.

“This changes everything for quantum computing.”

The control chip was developed at the Microsoft Quantum Laboratories at the University of Sydney, a unique industry-academic partnership that is changing the way scientists tackle engineering challenges.

“Building a quantum computer is perhaps the most challenging engineering task of the 21st century. This can’t be achieved working with a small team in a university laboratory in a single country but needs the scale afforded by a global tech giant like Microsoft,”  Reilly said.

“Through our partnership with Microsoft, we haven’t just suggested a theoretical architecture to overcome the input-output bottleneck, we’ve built it.

“We have demonstrated this by designing a custom silicon chip and coupling it to a quantum system,” he said. “I’m confident to say this is the most advanced integrated circuit ever built to operate at deep cryogenic temperatures.”

If realized, quantum computers promise to revolutionize information technology by solving problems beyond the scope of classical computers in fields as diverse as cryptography, medicine, finance, artificial intelligence and logistics.

‘The full stack’ needed for a useful quantum machine: Professor David Reilly is working with Microsoft scientists globally to realise a fault-tolerant universal quantum computer. The device he has invented operates at the interface between classical and quantum systems. Source: Microsoft

Power Budget

Quantum computers are at a similar stage that classical computers were in the 1940s. Machines like ENIAC, the world’s first electronic computer, required rooms of control systems to achieve any useful function.

It has taken decades to overcome the scientific and engineering challenges that now allows for billions of transistors to fit into your mobile phone.

“Our industry is facing perhaps even bigger challenges to take quantum computing beyond the ENIAC stage,” Reilly said.

“We need to engineer highly complex silicon chips that operate at 0.1 Kelvin,” he said. “That’s an environment 30 times colder than deep space”.

Sebastian Pauka’s doctoral research at the University of Sydney encompassed much of the work to interface quantum devices with the chip. He said: “Operating at such cold temperatures means we have an incredibly low power budget. If we try to put more power into the system, we overheat the whole thing.”

In order to achieve their result, the scientists at Sydney and Microsoft built the most advanced integrated circuit to operate at cryogenic temperatures.

“We have done this by engineering a system that operates in close proximity to the qubits without disturbing their operations,” Professor Reilly said.

“Current control systems for qubits are removed meters away from the action, so to speak. They exist mostly at room temperature.

“In our system we don’t have to come off the cryogenic platform. The chip is right there with the qubits. This means lower power and higher speeds. It’s a real control system for quantum technology.”

Years of Engineering

“Working out how to control these devices takes years of engineering development,” Professor Reilly said. “For this device we started four years ago when the University of Sydney started its partnership with Microsoft, which represents the single biggest investment in quantum technology in Australia.

“We built lots of models and design libraries to capture the behavior of transistors at deep cryogenic temperatures. Then we had to build devices, get them verified, characterized and finally connect them to qubits to see them work in practice.”

Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of Sydney, Professor Stephen Garton, said: “The whole university community is proud of Professor Reilly’s success and we look forward to many years of continued partnership with Microsoft.”

Professor Reilly said the field has now fundamentally changed. “It’s not just about ‘here is my qubit’. It’s about how you build all the layers and all the tech to build a real machine.

‘Our partnership with Microsoft allows us to work with academic rigor, with the benefit of seeing our results quickly put into practice.”

The Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research), Professor Duncan Ivison, said: “Our partnership with Microsoft has been about realizing David Reilly’s inspired vision to enable quantum technology. It’s great to see that vision becoming a reality.”

Professor Reilly said: “If we had remained solely in academia this chip would never have been built.”

The Australian scientist said he isn’t stopping there.

“We are just getting started on this new wave of quantum innovation,” he said. “The great thing about the partnership is we don’t just publish a paper and move on. We can now continue with the blueprint to realize quantum technology at the industrial scale.”

This research was supported by Microsoft Corporation and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems. We acknowledge the facilities as well as the scientific and technical assistance of the Research and Prototype Foundry, a Core Research Facility at the University of Sydney, and a part of the Australian National Fabrication Facility (ANFF).

— From the University of Sydney

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Matt Swayne

With a several-decades long background in journalism and communications, Matt Swayne has worked as a science communicator for an R1 university for more than 12 years, specializing in translating high tech and deep tech for the general audience. He has served as a writer, editor and analyst at The Quantum Insider since its inception. In addition to his service as a science communicator, Matt also develops courses to improve the media and communications skills of scientists and has taught courses. [email protected]

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