A 64-qubit trapped-ion system using BF-DCQO optimizes lattice protein folding Hamiltonians for six peptides, reaching classical reference energies in multiple cases after hybrid post-processing.
Scalable multispecies ion transport in a grid-based surface-electrode trap
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4roles
background 1polarities
background 1representative citing papers
A 3D-printed micro-ion trap with an enlarged loading zone improves hot-ion capture by keeping the Mathieu-q parameter low enough for effective laser cooling without lowering RF voltage.
A new open-hardware DAC module prototype based on commercial chips is presented and characterized for ultra-low noise ion-trap electrode control.
Vertical ion shuttling protocols in multi-rail traps can limit motional excitation to under 8 quanta in 500 μs by protocol choice, with surface heating dominant only at longer durations.
citing papers explorer
-
Protein folding on a 64 qubit trapped-ion hardware via counterdiabatic quantum optimization
A 64-qubit trapped-ion system using BF-DCQO optimizes lattice protein folding Hamiltonians for six peptides, reaching classical reference energies in multiple cases after hybrid post-processing.
-
Design and fabrication of a micro-ion trap with a 3D-printed loading zone for improved hot-ion capture
A 3D-printed micro-ion trap with an enlarged loading zone improves hot-ion capture by keeping the Mathieu-q parameter low enough for effective laser cooling without lowering RF voltage.
-
Low-cost Ultra-low Noise DAC System-on-Module for Scalable Ion-Trap Electrode Control
A new open-hardware DAC module prototype based on commercial chips is presented and characterized for ultra-low noise ion-trap electrode control.
-
Low-Excitation Vertical Ion Shuttling in Scalable Multi-Rail Ion Trap Architectures
Vertical ion shuttling protocols in multi-rail traps can limit motional excitation to under 8 quanta in 500 μs by protocol choice, with surface heating dominant only at longer durations.