Abstract
Variational quantum eigensolvers (VQEs) are leading candidates to demonstrate near-term quantum advantage. Here, we conduct density-matrix simulations of leading gate-based VQEs for a range of molecules. We numerically quantify their level of tolerable depolarizing gate-errors. We find that: (i) The best-performing VQEs require gate-error probabilities between 10−6 and 10−4 (10−4 and 10−2 with error mitigation) to predict, within chemical accuracy, ground-state energies of small molecules with 4 − 14 orbitals. (ii) ADAPT-VQEs that construct ansatz circuits iteratively outperform fixed-circuit VQEs. (iii) ADAPT-VQEs perform better with circuits constructed from gate-efficient rather than physically-motivated elements. (iv) The maximally-allowed gate-error probability, pc, for any VQE to achieve chemical accuracy decreases with the number N II of noisy two-qubit gates as pc∝~NII−1 . Additionally, pc decreases with system size, even with error mitigation, implying that larger molecules require even lower gate-errors. Thus, quantum advantage via gate-based VQEs is unlikely unless gate-error probabilities are decreased by orders of magnitude.
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CITATION STYLE
Dalton, K., Long, C. K., Yordanov, Y. S., Smith, C. G., Barnes, C. H. W., Mertig, N., & Arvidsson-Shukur, D. R. M. (2024). Quantifying the effect of gate errors on variational quantum eigensolvers for quantum chemistry. Npj Quantum Information, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41534-024-00808-x
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