IQM staff publishes a quantum-computer breakthrough in Nature

30
/
09
/
2020
6
 min. read

The new high-speed nanoscale radiation detector is now on par with the best quantum computer readers. Many present IQM employees co-authored the research carried out at Aalto University and VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland.

Artistic impression of electric conduction and superconductor proximity effect in a heated graphene bolometer. Credit: Heikka Valja.

Prof. Mikko Möttönen’s university research group and collaborators have engineered a fast and ultra-sensitive nanoscale bolometer that detects very faint microwave radiation. In fact, the radiation detected is so weak that heating up a cup of coffee at room temperature, for 1°C in a microwave oven would have taken 50 septillion times more energy. That is a 5 followed by 25 zeroes.

The device is so tiny; it could even fit inside a bacterium,” says Möttönen who is a joint Professor of Quantum Technology at Aalto University and VTT, and also a Co-Founder of IQM.

The new bolometer can measure the energy of photons much more accurately and faster than before. This is essential for quantum computers, since measuring the energy of qubits, the quantum bits, is an integral part of quantum algorithms. Moreover, the device is small and readily integrable into superconducting quantum processors, providing a clear path towards real-world applications.

Image: Two authors of the Nature paper on the new bolometer at IQM laboratories: Roope Kokkoniemi (left) and Kuan Yen Tan (right).
We started the proof-of-concept using gold palladium for the bolometer,” says M.Sc. Roope Kokkoniemi, the first author of the Nature paper who just joined IQM.
It worked but at the same time we also figured out how to make it even better. This is where graphene comes in as a replacement. The end result is indeed a much better sensor that can operate at higher speed, so much better that it can be useful in reading out the state of a superconducting qubit, the building block of a superconducting quantum processor,” added Roope.

The work was a collaborative effort with Professor Pertti Hakonen’s, NANO group at Aalto University, who have world-leading expertise in fabricating graphene-based devices.

Accelerating the development at IQM

In quantum computers such as the ones developed at IQM, this detector technology could prove very useful in replacing conventional readers and enabling the scaling up of future quantum processors due to its relatively small size. By virtue of being at the epicenter of quantum in Finland, IQM is in a unique position to commercialize such breakthroughs through close cooperation with the growing local quantum ecosystem.

We consider this an exciting milestone in the field of quantum technology. IQM is constantly looking for new ways to enhance its quantum-computer technology and this new bolometer certainly fits the bill,” explains Dr. Kuan Yen Tan, Co-Founder of IQM who was also involved in the reported research.

Technology from the best research

IQM is a prime example of a successful technology transfer story, epitomizing how research can be commercialized in an expedited way. IQM has become the leading quantum-computer company in Europe in an extraordinarily short time, already making its way towards the first commercial quantum computer sale. The company has managed to establish itself a unique foundation in the field, not only because of it has been able to recruit a major fraction of the highly limited pool of talented quantum engineers, but also because of its ability to cooperate with universities and industry partners all over Europe.

Significant part of IQM’s rapid development and brilliance in the field of quantum computing stems from the close interplay with academia. In fact, IQM is highly integrated in academia and most of its employees have research background. IQM’s team has collectively published over 640 scientific articles with more than 27,000 citations.

IQM’s aim is to become a pan-European quantum-computer company and further expand its partnerships with the best research teams all over Europe.

The link to the Nature article

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2753-3

The link to the Aalto University’s press release

https://www.aalto.fi/en/news/new-detector-breakthrough-pushes-boundaries-of-quantum-computing

IQM Contacts for questions and comments

Dr. Kuan Yen Tan 

Chief  technology officer

kuan@meetiqm.com

Tel. +358 50 477 8091  

(English & Chinese) 

About IQM Quantum Computers

IQM is the global leader in building quantum computers. IQM provides on-premises quantum computers for supercomputing centres and research labs and offers full access to its hardware. For industrial customers, IQM delivers quantum advantage through a unique application-specific, co-design approach.

IQM’s commercial quantum computers include Finland’s first commercial 50-qubit quantum computer with VTT, IQM-led consortium’s (Q-Exa) HPC quantum accelerator in Germany, and IQM processors will also be used in the first quantum accelerator in Spain. IQM has over 290 employees with offices in Espoo (Finland), Munich (Germany), Madrid (Spain), Paris (France), Singapore, and Palo Alto (CA, US).

IQM Media contact

Sylwia Barthel de Weydenthal
Head of Marketing and Communications

Explore more

Press release
22
/
04
/
2024

IQM Resonance webinar to showcase how cloud quantum computing can advance exploration and research

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
25
/
03
/
2024

Jülich Supercomputing Centre to install new quantum computer “IQM Spark” in July

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
19
/
03
/
2024

IQM Quantum Computers launches IQM Resonance, a cloud service to advance quantum exploration and research

Read more
2
 min. read
Press release
19
/
02
/
2024

IQM Quantum Computers announces restructuring programme for next-phase growth

Read more
1
 min. read
Press release
19
/
02
/
2024

IQM Quantum Computers achieves a new benchmark result on 20-qubit quantum computer

Read more
2
 min. read
Press release
13
/
02
/
2024

IQM Quantum Computers announces a new Co-CEO structure for the next growth phase

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
29
/
01
/
2024

IQM–OpenOcean–Lakestar State of Quantum 2024: Quantum resilient to investment slowdown with widespread government backing

Read more
5
 min. read
Press release
29
/
01
/
2024

State of Quantum 2024 Report

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
14
/
12
/
2023

IQM announces expansion to US, signs partnership with UC Berkeley to develop advanced quantum processors

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
13
/
11
/
2023

IQM Quantum Computers to advance future hybrid quantum applications with NVIDIA

Read more
1
 min. read
Press release
08
/
11
/
2023

IQM launches IQM Radiance – a 150-qubit system paving the way to quantum advantage

Read more
3
 min. read
Press release
09
/
10
/
2023

Finland launches a 20-qubit quantum computer – development towards more powerful quantum computers continues

Read more
3
 min. read