Decoherence Impediments in Quantum Computing and Fundamental Challenges of Quantum Error Correction
Shahebaz Ahmed Khan *
Jayaprakash Narayana Engineering College, Hyderabad, India.
Abdul Ahad Afroz
ISL Engineering College, Hyderabad, India.
Shaik Subhan Ali
Avanthi Institute of Engineering and Technology, Hyderabad, India.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This review synthesizes current understanding of decoherence pathways across leading hardware platforms and explains why several experimentally observed noise features—drift, burst events, coherent components, correlated and non-Markovian structure, and leakage—can be disproportionately damaging for QEC. Decoherence remains the dominant impediment to scalable quantum computing because it is not a single error mechanism but a system-level phenomenon arising from materials defects, electromagnetic loss, control electronics, measurement backaction, and the broader environment in which a processor operates. Quantum error correction (QEC) is designed to algorithmically suppress physical noise, yet its practical success depends on how closely real devices satisfy the assumptions under which fault tolerance is proved: approximate locality, weak temporal correlations, sufficiently stochastic error statistics, low leakage, and reliable syndrome extraction. We then evaluate fundamental and engineering challenges that shape the viability of QEC at scale: syndrome measurement fidelity, correlated error suppression, decoding latency and classical co-processing, architectural constraints (connectivity, crosstalk, calibration overhead), and the resource cost of implementing a universal fault-tolerant gate set. Recent demonstrations of below-threshold behaviour and “break-even” regimes show that QEC is transitioning from theory to practice, but also clarify what remains unresolved: maintaining stable noise below fault-tolerance targets over long times, scaling to many logical qubits with low correlated-error rates, and integrating hardware-aware codes and decoders. We conclude with research priorities that treat decoherence and QEC as part of a co-designed stack spanning device physics, control, architecture, and algorithms.
Keywords: Decoherence, noise spectroscopy, correlated errors, leakage, fault tolerance, surface code, bosonic codes, decoding, quantum error mitigation, scalable quantum computing