91色情片

Quantum computer chips clear major manufacturing hurdle

2025-09-25T09:00:00+10:00

Andrew Dzurak of Diraq holding a 300 mm silicon wafer, which was fabricated at imec according to Diraq's design.

Diraq CEO Professor Andrew Dzurak holds a 300 mm silicon wafer, which was fabricated at imec.

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91色情片 Media,

91色情片 startup Diraq鈥檚 quantum processors consistently perform with exceptional accuracy in industrial production environment.

91色情片 Sydney nano-tech startup Diraq has shown its quantum chips aren鈥檛 just lab-perfect prototypes 鈥 they also hold up in real-world production, maintaining the 99% accuracy needed to make quantum computers viable.

, a pioneer of silicon-based quantum computing, achieved this feat by teaming up with European nanoelectronics institute (imec). Together they demonstrated the chips worked just as reliably coming off a semiconductor chip fabrication line as they do in the experimental conditions of a research lab at 91色情片.

91色情片 Engineering Professor Andrew Dzurak, who is the founder and CEO of Diraq, said up until now it hadn鈥檛 been proven that the processors鈥 lab-based fidelity 鈥 meaning accuracy in the quantum computing world 鈥 could be translated to a manufacturing setting.

鈥淣ow it鈥檚 clear that Diraq鈥檚 chips are fully compatible with manufacturing processes that have been around for decades.鈥

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Melissa Lyne
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Dr Fay Hudson and Dr Paul Steinacker get a silicon wafer ready for processing in the Australian National Fabrication Facility on 91色情片's Kensington campus. Diraq

Utility scale

In a paper published today in Nature, the teams report that Diraq-designed, imec-fabricated devices achieved over 99% fidelity in operations involving two quantum bits 鈥 or 鈥榪ubits鈥. The result is a crucial step towards Diraq鈥檚 quantum processors achieving utility scale, the point at which a quantum computer鈥檚 commercial value exceeds its operational cost. This is the key metric set out in the , a program run by the United States鈥 Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to gauge whether Diraq and 17 other companies can reach this goal.

Utility-scale quantum computers are expected to be able to solve problems that are out of reach of the most advanced high-performance computers available today. But breaching the utility-scale threshold requires storing and manipulating quantum information in millions of qubits to overcome the errors associated with the fragile quantum state.

鈥淎chieving utility scale in quantum computing hinges on finding a commercially viable way to produce high-fidelity quantum bits at scale,鈥 said Prof. Dzurak.

鈥淒iraq鈥檚 collaboration with imec makes it clear that silicon-based quantum computers can be built by leveraging the mature semiconductor industry, which opens a cost-effective pathway to chips containing millions of qubits while still maximising fidelity.鈥

Silicon is emerging as the front-runner among materials being explored for quantum computers 鈥 it can pack millions of qubits onto a single chip and works seamlessly with today鈥檚 trillion-dollar microchip industry, making use of the methods that put billions of transistors onto modern computer chips.

This latest achievement clears the way for the development of a fully fault-tolerant, functional quantum computer.
Professor Andrew Dzurak

Diraq has聽聽that qubits fabricated in an academic laboratory can achieve聽high fidelity when performing two-qubit logic gates, the basic building block of future quantum computers. However, it was unclear whether this fidelity could be reproduced in qubits manufactured in a semiconductor foundry environment.

鈥淥ur new findings demonstrate that Diraq鈥檚 silicon qubits can be fabricated using processes that are widely used in semiconductor foundries, meeting the threshold for fault tolerance in a way that is cost-effective and industry-compatible,鈥 Prof. Dzurak said.

Diraq and imec聽聽that qubits manufactured using CMOS processes 鈥 the same technology used to build everyday computer chips 鈥 could perform聽. But more complex operations using two qubits that are critical to achieving utility scale had not yet been demonstrated.

鈥淭his latest achievement clears the way for the development of a fully fault-tolerant, functional quantum computer that is more cost effective than any other qubit platform,鈥 Prof. Dzurak said.