4.8 Article

Entanglement Purification and Protection in a Superconducting Quantum Network

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 128, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.080504

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  2. Army Research Laboratory
  3. LDRD funds from Argonne National Laboratory
  4. DOE, Office of Basic Energy Sciences
  5. UChicago's MRSEC (NSF) [DMR-2011854]
  6. NSF QLCI for HQAN [2016136]
  7. Soft and Hybrid Nanotechnology Experimental Resource (SHyNE) , a node of the National Science Foundation's National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NSF) [NNCI ECCS-2025633]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This research demonstrates the entanglement purification of Bell pairs shared between two remote superconducting quantum nodes through a purification process to correct amplitude damping errors, increasing fidelity. Additionally, dynamical decoupling and Rabi driving are used to protect entangled states from local noise, enhancing qubit dephasing time.
High-fidelity quantum entanglement is a key resource for quantum communication and distributed quantum computing, enabling quantum state teleportation, dense coding, and quantum encryption. Any sources of decoherence in the communication channel, however, degrade entanglement fidelity, thereby increasing the error rates of entangled state protocols. Entanglement purification provides a method to alleviate these nonidealities by distilling impure states into higher-fidelity entangled states. Here we demonstrate the entanglement purification of Bell pairs shared between two remote superconducting quantum nodes connected by a moderately lossy, 1-meter long superconducting communication cable. We use a purification process to correct the dominant amplitude damping errors caused by transmission through the cable, with fractional increases in fidelity as large as 25%, achieved for higher damping errors. The best final fidelity the purification achieves is 94.09 1 0.98%. In addition, we use both dynamical decoupling and Rabi driving to protect the entangled states from local noise, increasing the effective qubit dephasing time by a factor of 4, from 3 to 12 mu s. These methods demonstrate the potential for the generation and preservation of very high-fidelity entanglement in a superconducting quantum communication network.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available