Superconducting
quantum computers are huge and incredibly finicky machines at this
point. They need to be isolated from anything that might knock an
electron's spin off and ruin a calculation. That includes mechanical
isolation, in extreme vacuum chambers, where only a few molecules might
remain in a cubic meter or two of space. It includes electromagnetic
forces – IBM, for example, surrounds its precious quantum bits, or
qubits, with mu metals to absorb all magnetic fields.
And
it includes temperature. Any atom with a temperature above absolute
zero is by definition in a state of vibration, and any temperature more
than 10-15 thousandths of a degree above absolute zero simply shakes the
qubits to the poin where they can't maintain "coherence." So most
state-of-the-art quantum computers need to be cryogenically cooled using
complex and expensive equipment before the qubits will maintain their
state for any length of time and become useful.
Extreme vacuums, mu metals and
microkelvin-temperature cryogenic cooling: this is not a recipe for
affordable, portable or easily scalable quantum computing power. But an
Australian-born startup says it has developed a quantum microprocessor
that needs none of these things. Indeed, it runs happily at room
temperature. Right now, it's the size of a rack unit. Soon, it'll be the
size of a decent graphics card, and before too long it'll be small
enough to fit in mobile devices alongside traditional processors.
If this company does what it says it
can, you'll be able to integrate the advantages of quantum into
computers of just about any size, freeing this powerful new technology
from the constraints of supercomputer size and expense. Quantum software
and calculations won't need to be done through a fast connection to a
mainframe or the cloud, it'll be done on-site where it's needed. Pretty
disruptive stuff.
Quantum
Brilliance was founded in 2019 on the back of research undertaken by
its founders at the Australian National University, where they developed
techniques to manufacture, scale and control qubits embedded in
synthetic diamond.
This is complex business, so we'll throw over
to the Quantum Brilliance whitepaper for a technical description:
"Room-temperature diamond quantum computers consist of an array of
processor nodes. Each processor node is comprised of a nitrogen-vacancy
(NV) center (a defect in the diamond lattice consisting of a
substitutional nitrogen atom adjacent to a vacancy) and a cluster of
nuclear spins: the intrinsic nitrogen nuclear spin and up to ~4 nearby
13C nuclear spin impurities. The nuclear spins act as the qubits of the
computer, whilst the NV centers act as quantum buses that mediate the
initialization and readout of the qubits, and intra-and inter-node
multi-qubit operations. Quantum computation is controlled via
radiofrequency, microwave, optical and magnetic fields."
This
field itself is not new – indeed, room-temperature quantum qubits have
been around experimentally for more than 20 years. Quantum Brilliance's
contribution to the field is in working out how to manufacture these
tiny things precisely and replicably, as well as in miniaturizing and
integrating the control structures you need to get information in and
out of the qubits – the two key areas that have held these devices back
from scaling beyond a few qubits to date.
"Because diamond is such a rigid
material," says QB co-founder and COO Mark Luo over a Zoom call, "it's
really able to hold a lot of these properties in place – that allow
these quantum phenomena to be more stable compared to other systems out
there. Given that rigidity, we can actually leverage off a lot of
pre-existing classical control systems."
"The fundamental property
we're using," says new hire Mark Mattingley-Scott, who will oversee
operations for the company in Germany, "is nuclear spin, and not the
spin of an electron. An atom cares a lot less about thermal vibrations,
for example, than an electron, so this way we can run them at room
temperature. In the nitrogen vacancy, there's a hole, and through that
we're able to interact with the qubits. There are multiple interactions,
so we actually get potentially multiple qubits per vacancy."
The
company has already built a number of "Quantum development kits" in rack
units, each with around 5 qubits to work with, and it's placing them
with customers already, for benchmarking, integration, co-design
opportunities and to let companies start working out where they'll be
advantageous once they hit the market in a ~50-qubit "Quantum
Accelerator" product form by around 2025. "We think over a decade," says
Luo, "we can even produce a quantum system-on-a-chip for mobile
devices. Because this is truly material science technology that can
achieve that."
"In terms of commercial
deployment," says Luo, "we have the Pawsey Supercomupting Center, which
is currently the Southern Hemisphere's largest supercomputing center,
co-owned by CSIRO and some other universities. We established basically
Australia's first supercompuing quantum innovation hub, and we set up a
Pawsey Pioneer program where industry and research groups can utilize
our quantum operating system. We're deploying the world's first
room-temperature diamond quantum computing system at Pawsey in Q1 2022 –
we were meant to install it this month, but due to COVID delays we
can't actually cross the borders into Western Australia! We're planning
to deploy some in Germany as well, which is why we're so lucky to have
Mark coming on board to lead our operations in Europe and Germany."
How
do they perform compared to traditional superconducting quantum
computers? Extremely well, says Mattingley-Scott. "There's a figure of
merit which you can apply to the ability of individual qubits to be
useful, and that's coherence time. Superconducting qubits typically hold
their coherence for maybe 100, 150 microseconds. In room temperature
diamonds, we're talking about milliseconds. Like, a thousand times
longer, and that means you can do a lot more. That's part of the
equation; the other part is error rates. Qubits, fundamentally, have an
error rate, even before they lose coherence and descend into pure
randomness. The error rates we get with nitrogen vacancy qubits are
very, very good."
"So," he continues, "the basic answer is yes,
these are very powerful qubits, and what you can do with these qubits is
going to be more powerful than what you can do with superconducting
qubits, because you have longer to work with them, and they hold their
state."
So when will one of these things reach
the storied milestone of quantum supremacy, becoming more powerful than
any supercomputer at solving specific laboratory tests? In this case,
that's not the focus. "We have a clear five-year roadmap to produce
something we call quantum utility," says Luo. "Other systems can't
miniaturize, we can miniaturize. So for us it's about producing a
quantum computer or quantum accelerator that outperforms a classical
computer of the same size, weight and power. It's outperforming the
components within a supercomputer rather than outperforming entire
supercomputers, in order to provide commercial utility."
The Quantum Brilliance vision is to
make qubits an easily-integrated extra string to any computer's bow.
Something like today's high-end graphics cards, produced in mass
quantities to work in a broad range of systems at low unit costs.
Software developers can then use traditional computing where that's
advantageous and quantum only where it shines.
That could be in
tasks that involve simulating pretty much anything with an atomic
structure that exhibits quantum mechanical behavior; Mattingley-Scott
lists pharmacological drug development, battery electrode development
and energy generation as fields where this kind of gear could make an
immediate impact. It could be in the linear algebra and matrix-style
operations that underpin a lot of machine learning and AI – an
explosively growing field in itself – and it could be highly useful in
tasks that involve optimization, for example trying to reduce energy
usage across the entire global business structure of a large logistics
company.
"The
potential business impact of quantum computing," says Mattingley-Scott,
"is that it's going to fundamentally change almost everything we do,
and the way we do it. I had a long, 32-year career at IBM, and for the
last five of those I was running IBM's Ambassador Program, essentially a
pre-sales and tech sales channel for quantum computing. And I had my
eye on what was happening with diamonds, because if you can strike out
the requirement to cryogenically cool your computer, it completely
reframes the value proposition. So I've had Quantum Brilliance on my
radar for some time, there's no other company working on a value
proposition like this. And when the opportunity came along, that's why I
joined."
"So with our five-year plan to get to
that graphics card-sized Quantum Accelerator," he continues, "there's
lots of uncertainties, and unknown variables. But we're not waiting for
any magical new technology. There are no gaps. We know how to get to
that device, we just have to roll up our sleeves and do it. And
industrialize things, and get the yields and capacities up and that good
stuff. But that's essentially the stuff the semiconductor industry has
proven itself very good at, and we'll be leveraging that. So I can't
give you exact dates, but that's where we're headed to, an
industrialized type volume business."