The work is focused on creating a scalable architecture that remains robust despite significant photon loss. This includes evaluating and selecting photonic platforms, designing low-loss components, and implementing logical qubits that correct photon-loss errors as fundamental building blocks. The activities involved were detailed layout design and simulation of photonic structures, the integration of EO materials, the development of custom electronics, and the testing of fusion and switching mechanisms. Two dedicated fabrication runs have been executed to provide the hardware needed to validate the architecture experimentally. Through iterative design, measurement, and refinement, the task advances both the theoretical and practical foundations required for a modular, loss-tolerant photonic quantum processor.
The QUQUP processor architecture is presented as an integral part of the greater UQC system architecture. The PIC design, simulation, and verification process is refined to a closed-loop procedure that ensures the geometries and manufactured results are compliant with system requirements and constraints.
An electronic control and driver unit PACU was developed for controlled operation of core photonic subsystem assemblies, including thermal control, electrical and optical interfacing, and an Ethernet control interface.