High-fidelity CNOT gate for donor electron spin qubits in silicon
Stay up to date with Silicon Quantum Computing and subscribe now for alerts and news.
High-fidelity CNOT gate for donor electron spin qubits in silicon
Sydney, Australia, 6th March 2023 – Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC) has announced another important theoretical milestone. Recently released as an Editors highlight in the journal Physical Reviews Applied, the SQC team has demonstrated that the nuclear spins inherent to atom qubits in silicon can be used as atomic magnets to boost the fidelities of two-qubit […]
SQC uses entanglement to precisely map the exact location of nuclear spins in a silicon chip
Sydney, Australia, 9 February 2023 – Australian quantum computing manufacturer, Silicon Quantum Computing (SQC), has today announced how it has used entanglement to precisely map the exact location of individual nuclear spins in a silicon chip – a significant achievement in the field of quantum sensing. “This result is an important milestone in being able […]
On-site, local manufacturing
SQC devices are manufactured in our on-site atomic-scale chip production environment SQC manufactures all its devices in a dedicated on-site atomic-scale fabrication line developed over the past 20 years, leveraging ~$150 million of infrastructure at UNSW Sydney. Our facilities include globally unique and extensive atom manipulation and crystal growth facilities that sit alongside a […]
Silicon Quantum Computing completes asset sale
SQC today announced it has sold the intellectual property and capital equipment related to its SiMOS technology to a new spin-out company. In May 2017, SQC was launched to commercialise a portfolio of quantum computing hardware technologies developed by UNSW Sydney at the Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communications Technology. The portfolio included […]
Hitting the quantum ‘sweet spot’
Another exciting development for SQC. Our researchers, working with researchers from the Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology, have located the ‘sweet spot’ for positioning qubits in silicon to scale up atom-based quantum processors. Read about this latest milestone in The New Stack’s latest blog post here: Researchers Discover ‘Sweet Spot’ […]