Infineon and Quantinuum Partner to Drive Quantum Computing Innovation

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Infineon Technologies, a global leader in semiconductor solutions, and Quantinuum, a global  leader in integrated, full-stack quantum computing, announced a strategic partnership  to develop the future generation of ion traps. This partnership will drive the acceleration of  quantum computing and enable progress in fields such as generative chemistry, material  science, and artificial intelligence.  

“We are thrilled to partner with Quantinuum, a leader in quantum computing, to push the  boundaries of quantum computing and generate larger, more powerful machines that solve  meaningful real-life problems,” said Richard Kuncic, Senior Vice President and General  Manager Power Systems at Infineon Technologies. “This collaboration brings together  Infineon’s state-of-the-art knowledge in process development, fabrication, and quantum  processing unit (QPU) technology with Quantinuum’s cutting-edge ion-trap design expertise  and experience with operating high-performance commercial quantum computers.”  

Infineon innovates with a dedicated team to make their trapped-ion quantum processing  units (QPUs) the heart of the leading quantum computers. The company has invested in  this field since 2017, applying its expertise in high-volume processing technologies and  developing technologies, like integrated photonics and control electronics, to enable their  partners to scale the qubit count of their machines.  

In Quantinuum’s hardware approach, charged atoms are trapped with electromagnetic  fields so they can be manipulated and encoded with information using microwave signals  and lasers. This design has distinct advantages over other quantum hardware, including  higher fidelities and longer coherence times.

This collaboration builds on today’s leading performance of Quantinuum’s trapped-ion  quantum computers, which currently hold the world records in key performance benchmarks  such as 2-qubit gate fidelity, quantum volume and cross-entropy benchmark fidelity. To  deliver even better fidelity at greater scale and achieve commercial advantage, larger and  more sophisticated ion traps are needed. Engineers from the two companies have been  working together for more than a year and will intensify their efforts under the current  partnership to develop powerful ion traps for Quantinuum’s next-generation quantum  computers. 

“At Quantinuum, our mission is to accelerate useful quantum computing. We have announced a roadmap to reach universal fault-tolerance in 2029. Our partnership with  Infineon is key to our delivering on this commitment,“ said Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, President and  CEO of Quantinuum.