LECS
Laboratory for Emerging Computing Systems
Concordia University · Montréal
arXiv quant-ph

CHSH Violations using Dynamic Circuits

IEEE QCE · 2025 · arXiv:2504.18429
Quantum computing
IEEE QCE 2025 Jean-Baptiste Waring, Christophe Pere, Sébastien Le Beux
Abstract

Scalable quantum computing relies on high-quality, long-range entanglement, a challenge on noisy, near-term devices. The need for practical insights for near-term algorithm design calls for trade-offs exploration in implementing dynamic circuits on current hardware. In this work, we experimentally compare three CNOT implementations for generating Bell states across varying qubit separations on a 127-qubit IBM Quantum Eagle processor (ibm_quebec): a unitary (SWAP-based) approach, a dynamic approach with mid-circuit measurements and classical feedforward, and a post-processed approach. We use Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) inequality violations to quantify entanglement quality. We observe that, beyond 10 qubits, dynamic circuits lead to higher |S| values than the unitary approach, demonstrating improved distance-dependent entanglement preservation. The post-processed approach yields the highest CHSH values, reaching |S| > 2 up to 13 qubits. Our results underscore the critical need for faster classical feedforward and higher readout fidelity.

Citation

If you build on this work, please cite the paper using the entry below. The BibTeX can be copied to clipboard with the button at the top of this page.

@misc{jeanbaptiste2025250418429,
  title         = {CHSH Violations using Dynamic Circuits},
  author        = {Jean-Baptiste Waring and Christophe Pere and Sébastien Le Beux},
  year          = {2025},
  eprint        = {2504.18429},
  archivePrefix = {arXiv},
  primaryClass  = {quant-ph}
}

Acknowledgements

This work was supported in part by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) Discovery Grants programme and by the Fonds de recherche du Québec — Nature et technologies (FRQNT).