Abstract

Quantum computers must meet extremely stringent qualitative and quantitative requirements on their qubits in order to solve real-life problems. Quantum circuit fragmentation techniques divide a large quantum circuit into a number of sub-circuits that can be executed on the smaller noisy quantum hardware available. However, the process of quantum circuit fragmentation involves finding an ideal cut that has exponential time complexity and also the classical post-processing required to reconstruct the output. In this paper, we represent a quantum circuit using a weighted graph and propose a novel classical graph partitioning algorithm for selecting an efficient fragmentation that reduces the entanglement between the sub-circuits along with balancing the estimated error in each sub-circuit. We also demonstrate a comparative study of different classical and quantum approaches to graph partitioning for finding such a cut. We present FragQC, a software tool that cuts a quantum circuit into sub-circuits when its error probability exceeds a certain threshold. With this proposed approach, we achieve an increase in fidelity of 13.38% compared to direct execution without cutting the circuit, and 7.88% over the state-of-the-art ILP-based method for the benchmark circuits.The code for FragQC is available at https://github.com/arnavdas88/FragQC.

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