Surface-Code Thresholds and Qubit Footprints in Shuttling-Based Spin-Qubit Railways

Abstract

We present a fault-tolerant mapping of rotated surface codes onto a 2× N silicon spin-qubit railway architecture, utilizing electron shuttling to resolve the wiring fan-out bottleneck. Employing circuit-level noise modeling, we evaluate threshold performances across various noise biases. We demonstrate that shuttling check qubits instead of data qubits fundamentally improves system thresholds. Crucially, under a noise model biased towards dephasing for spin-qubit shuttling, the non-CSS XZZX surface code outperforms standard CSS variants. By tailoring the topological code to this specific inherent bias, we show that the Megaquop footprint is achievable with a distance 7 code requiring a p = 10-3 physical error rate, highlighting a pathway for substantial hardware reductions in early fault-tolerant quantum processors.

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