Researchers in Sweden have created a pulse‑activated microwave amplifier that reduces power usage by a factor of ten while preserving qubit data integrity—an advance that promises to accelerate the growth of scalable quantum computers.
A team at Chalmers University of Technology reports that its new low‑noise amplifier only activates during qubit read‑out pulses, cutting average power consumption to roughly one‑tenth that of current systems. By shedding the burden of constant activation, the design keeps qubits cooler and more coherent—overcoming a vital hurdle for large‑scale quantum processors.
Amplification lies at the heart of quantum computing. Qubits output extremely weak microwave signals requiring high‑sensitivity detectors to convert them into digital information. Conventional amplifiers, however, generate heat and electromagnetic noise even when inactive, leading to decoherence that degrades qubit states. The Chalmers design interrupts that cycle, powering up the amplifier only during precise measurement pulses.
Lead author Yin Zeng, a doctoral researcher in terahertz and millimetre‑wave technologies, explains that this is “the most sensitive amplifier that can be built today using transistors” and that the power reduction does not compromise performance. Measurements confirm that the device pulses into readiness within 35 nanoseconds—fast enough to match typical qubit read‑out schedules.
Scaling quantum machines requires thousands of qubits, each with its own read‑out circuitry. The compounded thermal load from always‑on amplifiers intensifies the risk of qubit decoherence and forces designers to introduce bulky thermal isolation, complicating system architecture. “This study offers a solution in future upscaling of quantum computers where the heat generated by these qubit amplifiers poses a major limiting factor,” says Jan Grahn, professor of microwave electronics and co‑author.
Chalmers researchers point out that the amplifier operates off duty‑cycling principles. Instead of a sustained power draw, the design activates only during critical read‑out windows. Given that qubit pulses might be separated by milliseconds, the majority of operation falls outside measurement intervals—minimising power usage through efficient gating.
The device hinges on a modified InP high‑electron‑mobility transistor low‑noise amplifier. Researchers altered the bias circuitry to permit rapid turn‑on/off cycling and employed genetic‑programming algorithms to optimise the bias profile, yielding ultra‑fast recovery and low transient noise.
Detailed testing at cryogenic temperatures demonstrated a gain recovery within approximately 120 ns and stabilised noise levels under 2 K after around 200 ns—parameters within acceptable ranges for high‑fidelity qubit read‑out. Peak power efficiency scaled proportionately with duty cycle, validating the concept’s practicality for systems with low measurement frequency.
Chalmers’ amplifier is poised to feed into national ambitions such as the Wallenberg Centre for Quantum Technology, where developers seek the next generation of fault‑tolerant quantum machines. By reducing the thermal and spatial overhead of cryogenic electronics, these pulse‑driven amplifiers free engineers to pursue denser qubit arrays without compromising stability.
Quantum industry stakeholders note strong implications for fields reliant on increased qubit capacities—especially error‑corrected logical qubit architectures, which require multiplexed read‑out across dozens or hundreds of physical qubits. The savings in cryogenic cooling load could enable system designs previously deemed unfeasible due to energy constraints.
Remaining challenges include fine‑tuning the amplifier’s bias circuitry to reduce drift and to scale the pulse‑operation into multi‑channel environments. Gaining reproducibility across batches and maintaining low‑noise performance during rapid cycling will be essential. The Chalmers team suggests further collaboration with hardware firms such as Low Noise Factory AB to translate the design into commercial cryogenic amplifier modules.
This breakthrough aligns with broader quantum hardware trends aimed at minimising overhead and enhancing read‑out precision. While superconducting parametric amplifiers have shown ultra‑low noise, they remain complex and static in operation. The Chalmers approach offers simplicity—retaining transistor‑based electronics while dynamically managing power consumption.