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Future Qubit Foundry to keep Australia at the forefront of quantum tech

21 February 2023
University commits $7.4m to quantum tech scale-up
The Future Qubit Foundry in the Sydney Nanoscience Hub will position Sydney for quantum partnerships with industry and government.
Inside the cleanroom at the Sydney Nanoscience Hub.

Inside the cleanroom at the Sydney Nanoscience Hub.

The University of Sydney has announced a $7.4 million investment to expand its quantum technology facilities to establish the Future Qubit Foundry at the Sydney Nanoscience Hub.

The foundry will be a national-leading facility to invent the technology of tomorrow鈥檚 quantum computers, enabling them to operate at scale and be of use to society.

Professor Emma Johnston.

Professor Emma Johnston.

Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research)聽Professor Emma Johnston聽said: 鈥淭he Future Qubit Foundry will leverage the University of Sydney鈥檚 research leadership in advanced quantum technologies and put us at the forefront of next-generation design of qubits, the heart of quantum computers.

鈥淐rucially, it will also help ensure Australia can train the quantum workforce needed to operate tomorrow鈥檚 quantum tech.鈥

The announcement came on the eve of the聽聽conference hosted by the聽, a collaboration between the University of Sydney, UNSW, Macquarie University, UTS and the NSW Government.

Quantum computers operating at scale promise to solve intractable problems in drug design, cryptography and engineering outside the reach of classical computing.聽聽that quantum technology will be a $6 billion industry in Australia by 2045, employing 19,400 people.

Professor Johnston said: 鈥淏y training the very best quantum technologists, the University will deliver tangible benefits to the Australian economy. And it will lock us into global supply chains as quantum computers come into their own.鈥

The University's impressive quantum infrastructure already acts as a beacon to attract world-class researchers to Sydney.

Professor Stephen Bartlett.

Professor Stephen Bartlett.

鈥淎ustralians like聽Dr John Bartholomew, who was at Caltech, and聽Dr Xanthe Croot, who was at Princeton, have come home to establish research teams at Sydney to develop future quantum tech,鈥澛Professor Stephen Bartlett, Associate Dean (Research) of the Faculty of Science, said.

鈥淭he qubit foundry will add to our national and global standing, ensuring Sydney is one of the world鈥檚 best places to research quantum technology.鈥

Professor Bartlett, who heads the University鈥檚聽聽in the聽School of Physics, said that the building blocks of tomorrow鈥檚 quantum computers are yet to be invented.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why it鈥檚 so vital to invest now into facilities like this to accelerate qubit research.鈥

Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research 鈥 Enterprise and Engagement)聽Professor Julie Cairney聽said: 鈥淭he Future Qubit Foundry is being designed聽so that we can work with government and industry to scale it up.

鈥淲e envisage building an expanded facility that is available to the Australian quantum research community and, importantly, can be utilised by the emerging quantum tech private sector.鈥

The University of Sydney Future Qubit Foundry will bring together Sydney鈥檚 existing strengths in quantum computing research to focus on the fundamental science, engineering and industry partnerships needed to invent the next generation of qubits.聽

It will occupy world-class laboratory and cleanroom space in the聽Sydney Nanoscience Hub, offer national-leading facilities for fabricating and characterising novel quantum devices and attract and host new strategic hires in quantum materials and devices.

The Future Qubit Foundry will be supported by new fabrication capabilities at the Research and Prototype Foundry, the University鈥檚 state-of-the-art Core Research Facility for micro- and nano-scale fabrication located within Sydney Nano Hub.

Marcus Strom

Science Media Adviser

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