Entanglement and iSWAP gate between molecular qubits
IQOQI Quantum Seminar
Speaker: Kang-Kuen NiWhen: Jun. 27 2025 09:00
Where: Erwin Schrödinger Saal, Innsbruck
Trapped polar molecules have been proposed as a promising quantum computing platform since 2002, offering scalability and single-particle addressability while still leveraging inherent complexity and strong couplings of molecules. Recent progress in the single quantum state preparation and coherence of the hyperfine-rotational states of individually trapped molecules allows them to serve as promising qubits, with intermolecular dipolar interactions creating entanglement. Here we harness intrinsic molecular resources to implement a two-qubit iSWAP gate using individually trapped NaCs molecules. By allowing the molecules to interact for 664 μs at a distance of 1.9 μm, we create a maximally entangled Bell state with a fidelity of 94(3)\% in trials in which both molecules are present. Using motion–rotation coupling, we measure residual excitation of the lowest few motional states along the axial trapping direction and find them to be the primary source of decoherence. Finally, we identify two non-interacting hyperfine states within the ground rotational level in which we encode a qubit. The interaction is toggled by transferring between interacting and non-interacting states to realize an iSWAP gate. We verify the gate performance by measuring its logical truth table.