QUANT-PHJul 18, 2023
A Cryogenic Memristive Neural Decoder for Fault-tolerant Quantum Error CorrectionVictor Yon, Frédéric Marcotte, Pierre-Antoine Mouny et al.
Neural decoders for quantum error correction (QEC) rely on neural networks to classify syndromes extracted from error correction codes and find appropriate recovery operators to protect logical information against errors. Its ability to adapt to hardware noise and long-term drifts make neural decoders a promising candidate for inclusion in a fault-tolerant quantum architecture. However, given their limited scalability, it is prudent that small-scale (local) neural decoders are treated as first stages of multi-stage decoding schemes for fault-tolerant quantum computers with millions of qubits. In this case, minimizing the decoding time to match the stabilization measurements frequency and a tight co-integration with the QPUs is highly desired. Cryogenic realizations of neural decoders can not only improve the performance of higher stage decoders, but they can minimize communication delays, and alleviate wiring bottlenecks. In this work, we design and analyze a neural decoder based on an in-memory computation (IMC) architecture, where crossbar arrays of resistive memory devices are employed to both store the synaptic weights of the neural decoder and perform analog matrix-vector multiplications. In simulations supported by experimental measurements, we investigate the impact of TiOx-based memristive devices' non-idealities on decoding fidelity. We develop hardware-aware re-training methods to mitigate the fidelity loss, restoring the ideal decoder's pseudo-threshold for the distance-3 surface code. This work provides a pathway to scalable, fast, and low-power cryogenic IMC hardware for integrated fault-tolerant QEC.
QUANT-PHJun 7, 2024
Robust quantum dots charge autotuning using neural network uncertaintyVictor Yon, Bastien Galaup, Claude Rohrbacher et al.
This study presents a machine-learning-based procedure to automate the charge tuning of semiconductor spin qubits with minimal human intervention, addressing one of the significant challenges in scaling up quantum dot technologies. This method exploits artificial neural networks to identify noisy transition lines in stability diagrams, guiding a robust exploration strategy leveraging neural networks' uncertainty estimations. Tested across three distinct offline experimental datasets representing different single quantum dot technologies, the approach achieves over 99% tuning success rate in optimal cases, where more than 10% of the success is directly attributable to uncertainty exploitation. The challenging constraints of small training sets containing high diagram-to-diagram variability allowed us to evaluate the capabilities and limits of the proposed procedure.
ARMay 29, 2023
Hardware-aware Training Techniques for Improving Robustness of Ex-Situ Neural Network Transfer onto Passive TiO2 ReRAM CrossbarsPhilippe Drolet, Raphaël Dawant, Victor Yon et al.
Passive resistive random access memory (ReRAM) crossbar arrays, a promising emerging technology used for analog matrix-vector multiplications, are far superior to their active (1T1R) counterparts in terms of the integration density. However, current transfers of neural network weights into the conductance state of the memory devices in the crossbar architecture are accompanied by significant losses in precision due to hardware variabilities such as sneak path currents, biasing scheme effects and conductance tuning imprecision. In this work, training approaches that adapt techniques such as dropout, the reparametrization trick and regularization to TiO2 crossbar variabilities are proposed in order to generate models that are better adapted to their hardware transfers. The viability of this approach is demonstrated by comparing the outputs and precision of the proposed hardware-aware network with those of a regular fully connected network over a few thousand weight transfers using the half moons dataset in a simulation based on experimental data. For the neural network trained using the proposed hardware-aware method, 79.5% of the test set's data points can be classified with an accuracy of 95% or higher, while only 18.5% of the test set's data points can be classified with this accuracy by the regularly trained neural network.