Thermodynamic limitations on fault-tolerant quantum computing
We investigate the thermodynamic limits on scaling fault-tolerant quantum computers due to heating from quantum error correction (QEC). Quantum computers require error correction, which accounts for 99.9% of the qubit demand and generates heat through information-erasing processes. This heating incr...
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigate the thermodynamic limits on scaling fault-tolerant quantum
computers due to heating from quantum error correction (QEC). Quantum computers
require error correction, which accounts for 99.9% of the qubit demand and
generates heat through information-erasing processes. This heating increases
the error rate, necessitating more rounds of error correction. We introduce a
dynamical model that characterizes heat generation and dissipation for arrays
of qubits weakly coupled to a refrigerator and identify a dynamical phase
transition between two operational regimes: a bounded-error phase, where
temperature stabilizes and error rates remain below fault-tolerance thresholds,
and an unbounded-error phase, where rising temperatures drive error rates
beyond sustainable levels, making fault tolerance infeasible. Applying our
model to a superconducting qubit system performing Shor's algorithm to factor
2048-bit RSA integers, we find that current experimental parameters place the
system in the bounded-error phase. Our results indicate that, while inherent
heating can become significant, this thermodynamic constraint should not limit
scalable fault tolerance if current hardware capabilities are maintained as
systems scale. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.12805 |