4.7 Article

An exact qubit allocation approach for NISQ architectures

Journal

QUANTUM INFORMATION PROCESSING
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11128-020-02901-4

Keywords

Quantum circuit; Qubit allocation; Exact approach; Noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ); Quantum circuit mapping

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61402244]
  2. Jiangsu Province Natural Science Foundation of China [BK20151274]
  3. Suqian Science and Technology Foundation [H201721]

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The noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) devices that have just emerged in recent years provide an opportunity for the physical realization of quantum circuits. As the first step of mapping quantum circuits to these devices, qubit allocation imposes a great impact on the number of additional quantum operations required throughout the mapping. The global optimization of qubit allocation is NP-hard, but since many current NISQ devices have very few qubits, it is possible to solve this problem exactly. In this paper, we propose an exact approach for qubit allocation, which takes advantage of the branch and bound algorithm as the basic framework. In order to further prune the considerably huge state space, three techniques have been proposed and integrated into the exact approach, including an optimized lower bound for quadratic assignment problem, prioritization of logical qubits, and branch pruning by structural symmetry of physical qubits. Moreover, based on the multiple optimal solutions obtained by the exact approach, we give an error-aware qubit allocation method. For problems that are too large to be solved by the exact approach, we also give a heuristic qubit allocation approach with polynomial time complexity. Experimental evaluations show that the exact approach proposed in this paper is feasible for the qubit allocation of current NISQ architectures. For all benchmarks considered, this exact approach can find multiple optimal solutions to the qubit allocation problem on IBM Melbourne, a 16-qubit NISQ architecture, in no more than 20 min. It can serve as a evaluation baseline of any heuristic approach. Experimental evaluations also show that the proposed heuristic approach is near-optimal in terms of routing cost. Both the exact approach and the heuristic approach can be integrated into existing quantum circuit mapping approaches.

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