5,883 research outputs found

    An Extension of Transformation-based Reversible and Quantum Circuit Synthesis

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    Transformation-based synthesis is a well established systematic approach to determine a circuit implementation from a reversible function specification. Due to the inherent bidirectionality of reversible circuits the basic method can be applied in a bidirectional manner. In the approaches to date, gates are added either to the input side or the output side of the circuit on each iteration. In this paper, we introduce a new variation where gates may be added at both ends during a single iteration when this is advantageous to reducing the cost of the circuit. Experimental results show the advantage of the new approach over previous transformation-based synthesis methods and that the additional computation is justified by the possibility of improved circuit costs

    Minimization of Quantum Circuits using Quantum Operator Forms

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    In this paper we present a method for minimizing reversible quantum circuits using the Quantum Operator Form (QOF); a new representation of quantum circuit and of quantum-realized reversible circuits based on the CNOT, CV and CV†^\dagger quantum gates. The proposed form is a quantum extension to the well known Reed-Muller but unlike the Reed-Muller form, the QOF allows the usage of different quantum gates. Therefore QOF permits minimization of quantum circuits by using properties of different gates than only the multi-control Toffoli gates. We introduce a set of minimization rules and a pseudo-algorithm that can be used to design circuits with the CNOT, CV and CV†^\dagger quantum gates. We show how the QOF can be used to minimize reversible quantum circuits and how the rules allow to obtain exact realizations using the above mentioned quantum gates.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, Proceedings of the ULSI Workshop 2012 (@ISMVL 2012

    Synthesis and Optimization of Reversible Circuits - A Survey

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    Reversible logic circuits have been historically motivated by theoretical research in low-power electronics as well as practical improvement of bit-manipulation transforms in cryptography and computer graphics. Recently, reversible circuits have attracted interest as components of quantum algorithms, as well as in photonic and nano-computing technologies where some switching devices offer no signal gain. Research in generating reversible logic distinguishes between circuit synthesis, post-synthesis optimization, and technology mapping. In this survey, we review algorithmic paradigms --- search-based, cycle-based, transformation-based, and BDD-based --- as well as specific algorithms for reversible synthesis, both exact and heuristic. We conclude the survey by outlining key open challenges in synthesis of reversible and quantum logic, as well as most common misconceptions.Comment: 34 pages, 15 figures, 2 table

    Polynomial-time T-depth Optimization of Clifford+T circuits via Matroid Partitioning

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    Most work in quantum circuit optimization has been performed in isolation from the results of quantum fault-tolerance. Here we present a polynomial-time algorithm for optimizing quantum circuits that takes the actual implementation of fault-tolerant logical gates into consideration. Our algorithm re-synthesizes quantum circuits composed of Clifford group and T gates, the latter being typically the most costly gate in fault-tolerant models, e.g., those based on the Steane or surface codes, with the purpose of minimizing both T-count and T-depth. A major feature of the algorithm is the ability to re-synthesize circuits with additional ancillae to reduce T-depth at effectively no cost. The tested benchmarks show up to 65.7% reduction in T-count and up to 87.6% reduction in T-depth without ancillae, or 99.7% reduction in T-depth using ancillae.Comment: Version 2 contains substantial improvements and extensions to the previous version. We describe a new, more robust algorithm and achieve significantly improved experimental result
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