The performance of today’s quantum hardware remains modest, and despite the hard work of innovators that is not going to change overnight. Each qubit platform faces its own significant challenges as vendors seek to scale up. But if we look at the details we can see that underlying progress remains strong across the hardware stack. Progress on error correcting codes must not be neglected. Innovation there has the potential to disrupt our standard assumptions about what it takes to build a quantum computer.
The strategic hardware playing field
As the quantum computing sector comes off the peak of its first hype cycle, questions on progress are inevitably being asked. This outlook asks specifically how the hardware itself is stepping up to the challenges it faces. To understand this, we need to appreciate the interplay between the performance specs that current hardware is able to achieve, and those required to deliver against different scenarios that players are targeting.
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The NISQ era
Some look for early noisy intermediate scale quantum (NISQ) devices to step-up and support commercially useful applications in the next 2-5 years.
Opinions differ on requirements. Some believe quantum annealing is already starting to do this. GQI believe gate-model protagonists are ideally looking for:
100-200+ physical qubits
99.99%+ fidelities, especially 2Q gate fidelity
High qubit connectivity
Probably this would be delivered in a single module, so interconnects may not be an issue.
It’s important to realize that there is no guarantee that quantum algorithms can deliver on their part of this bargain. Classical algorithms are a fierce competitor. Niche applications certainly look possible but broad quantum adoption looks much less likely without a further breakthrough.
A low depth algorithm breakthrough could still yield broad NISQ quantum advantage. However without further progress on algorithms the alternative could be a hard quantum winter. Making hardware developers financial plans robust to both these scenarios is a challenge.
Early FTQC
Others focus on the potential that will be realized by larger machines to deliver fault tolerant quantum computation (FTQC). Early machines will still be limited.
Much current discussion assumes a ‘standard model’ of how this will be achieved:
99.9%+ fidelities, especially 2Q gate fidelities
Beyond a certain module size, interconnects are essential for scaling
Sufficiently fast classical control logic
The 2D surface code (or similar) used to encode physical qubits into logical qubits
With standard error correction techniques overheads are very high. A system with 1 million physical qubits might offer only 200-300 truly high performance logical qubits, though better fidelities or better connectivity could radically improve this.
If we believe that several of today’s vendors can deliver on their announced roadmaps we will see broad early FTQC in 5-10 years. Many don’t see things playing out so smoothly. Scaling up is hard and some believe only their approach has what it takes to deliver eye of the needle FTQC.
The longer term
The longer term landscape will be shaped by developments that are even more uncertain.
Goliath FTQC – the direct future path would simply be brute force scaling of current hardware architectures. In the end we want 10,000+ logical qubits. Large device footprints could lead to truly immense machines, putting pressure on affordability.
Distributed FTQC – the emergence of quantum enabled networks provides new niche opportunities. In the end, an entanglement based quantum internet could potentially allow a literal exponential multiplication of quantum resources.
Turbo FTQC – to allow a fuller range of quantum speedups to become viable we would ideally like a new architecture with faster logical clock speeds, low overheads and capabilities such as a hardware efficient implementation of QRAM. No one is yet building such an architecture, but it is reasonable to believe that someday someone will.
FQQC opportunities
Not all applications require lots of qubits. ‘Few qubit’ quantum computing (FQQC) devices may find a variety of use, particularly in network related applications.
Cryptographic applications may provide an early opportunity in quantum enabled networks. Some see helping to join up a future entanglement based quantum internet as the biggest opportunity of all. Not all technology platforms will turn out to be suited to scale-up for large scale computational tasks. FQQC might be an excellent plan B.
For players with the right technology, and the strategy to finance the journey, there is no reason why NISQ, FTQC and FQQC opportunities cannot be joined up within one overall roadmap.
Jerry Chow (IBM Fellow) comments “The true opportunity is that there is one model of quantum computing: quantum circuits. We will make stepwise advances that allow us to execute quantum circuits more accurately. This will involve a mix of error suppression, error mitigation, and eventually error correction. Different hardware will be able to leverage these various techniques in different ways. Being optimistic about near term applications doesn’t preclude a desire to move on to FTQC. But current theoretical approaches to FTQC are speculative. We need to develop more hardware-aware higher efficiency error correction codes.”
Key challenges
The reality is that today’s devices are not yet anywhere near as good as we need them to be: the smaller devices are not large enough to move beyond the reach of classical simulation; the larger devices are not able to sustain the quality we need. The potential roadblocks we face in scaling up current designs vary by qubit platform, but are significant.
Access to the report
We offer a number of options to access the report:
Long summary for QCR members CLICK HERE
Purchase the report CLICK HERE
This report is a Must Read for providers, users, investors or anyone interested in quantum computing and what’s in store for it in the future.
The report totals 59 pages in length and covers the quantum hardware landscape in greater depth than any other source. Our analysis is product and technically driven, often with much scientific detail, while also offering a good overview for the quantum novice on major approaches and differentiations.
All the major vendors and QC architectures are discussed in detail including but not limited to: | Alibaba | Alice & Bob | AQT | Archer Materials | Atom Computing | AWS | Bleximo | C12 | ColdQuanta | D-Wave | Diraq | Duality Quantum Photonics | EeroQ | EleQtron | Entangled Networks | Fujitsu | Google | Hitachi | IBM | Infleqtion | Intel | IonQ | IQM | Jiuzhang Quantum | Keysight Technologies | M Squared | Microsoft | Nu Quantum | OQC | ORCA Computing | OriginQ | Oxford Ionics | Pasqal | Photonic Inc. | PsiQuantum | Qblox | QMICS | QphoX | Quandela | Quantinuum | Quantum Brilliance | Quantum Machines | Quantum Motion | QUDORA | QuEra Computing | QuiX | QuTech | Rigetti | Riverlane | SEEQC | Siquance | SpinQ | SQC | Toshiba | TuringQ | Universal Quantum | USTC | Xanada | Zurich Instruments
If you decide to purchase the report you can pay via PayPal or credit/bank card by selecting the appropriate option on the PayPal form. You can do this at the GQI website at this link CLICK HERE
The Table of Contents is shown below.