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Noise-Resilient and Reduced Depth Approximate Adders for NISQ Quantum Computing

Published: 05 June 2023 Publication History
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    The "Noisy intermediate-scale quantum" NISQ machine era primarily focuses on mitigating noise, controlling errors, and executing high-fidelity operations, hence requiring shallow circuit depth and noise robustness. Approximate computing is a novel computing paradigm that produces imprecise results by relaxing the need for fully precise output for error-tolerant applications including multimedia, data mining, and image processing. We investigate how approximate computing can improve the noise resilience of quantum adder circuits in NISQ quantum computing. We propose five designs of approximate quantum adders to reduce depth while making them noise-resilient, in which three designs are with carryout, while two are without carryout. We have used novel design approaches that include approximating the Sum only from the inputs (pass-through designs) and having zero depth, as they need no quantum gates. The second design style uses a single CNOT gate to approximate the SUM with a constant depth of O(1). We performed our experimentation on IBM Qiskit on noise models including thermal, depolarizing, amplitude damping, phase damping, and bitflip: (i) Compared to exact quantum ripple carry adder without carryout the proposed approximate adders without carryout have improved fidelity ranging from 8.34% to 219.22%, and (ii) Compared to exact quantum ripple carry adder with carryout the proposed approximate adders with carryout have improved fidelity ranging from 8.23% to 371%. Further, the proposed approximate quantum adders are evaluated in terms of various error metrics.

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    1. Noise-Resilient and Reduced Depth Approximate Adders for NISQ Quantum Computing

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      cover image ACM Conferences
      GLSVLSI '23: Proceedings of the Great Lakes Symposium on VLSI 2023
      June 2023
      731 pages
      ISBN:9798400701252
      DOI:10.1145/3583781
      Publication rights licensed to ACM. ACM acknowledges that this contribution was authored or co-authored by an employee, contractor or affiliate of the United States government. As such, the Government retains a nonexclusive, royalty-free right to publish or reproduce this article, or to allow others to do so, for Government purposes only.

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      Published: 05 June 2023

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      1. approximate computing
      2. noise
      3. quantum adders

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      GLSVLSI '23: Great Lakes Symposium on VLSI 2023
      June 5 - 7, 2023
      TN, Knoxville, USA

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