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Resource Optimized Quantum Architectures for Surface Code Implementations of Magic-State Distillation
Quantum computers capable of solving classically intractable problems are
under construction, and intermediate-scale devices are approaching completion.
Current efforts to design large-scale devices require allocating immense
resources to error correction, with the majority dedicated to the production of
high-fidelity ancillary states known as magic-states. Leading techniques focus
on dedicating a large, contiguous region of the processor as a single
"magic-state distillation factory" responsible for meeting the magic-state
demands of applications. In this work we design and analyze a set of optimized
factory architectural layouts that divide a single factory into spatially
distributed factories located throughout the processor. We find that
distributed factory architectures minimize the space-time volume overhead
imposed by distillation. Additionally, we find that the number of distributed
components in each optimal configuration is sensitive to application
characteristics and underlying physical device error rates. More specifically,
we find that the rate at which T-gates are demanded by an application has a
significant impact on the optimal distillation architecture. We develop an
optimization procedure that discovers the optimal number of factory
distillation rounds and number of output magic states per factory, as well as
an overall system architecture that interacts with the factories. This yields
between a 10x and 20x resource reduction compared to commonly accepted single
factory designs. Performance is analyzed across representative application
classes such as quantum simulation and quantum chemistry.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
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