PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Control of spin qubits at near absolute zero a game changer for quantum computers

University-industry collaboration to accelerate scale up of quantum machines

2025-06-25
(Press-News.org) Developing technology that allows quantum information to be both stable and accessible is a critical challenge in the development of useful quantum computers that operate at scale.

Research published today in the prestigious journal Nature provides a pathway for scaling

the number of quantum transistors (known as qubits) on a chip from current numbers under 100 to the millions needed to make quantum computation a practical reality. The result is enabled by new cryogenic control electronics, that operate at close to absolute zero, developed at The University of Sydney.

Lead researcher Professor David Reilly from the University of Sydney Nano Institute and School of Physics said: “This will take us from the realm of quantum computers being fascinating laboratory machines to the stage where we can start discovering the real-world problems that these devices can solve for humanity.”

The paper is the result of industry cooperation between the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales through respective quantum tech spin-out companies Emergence Quantum and Diraq. Professor Reilly’s company Emergence Quantum was established this year to commercialise quantum control technologies and other advanced electronics, just like the chip presented in this Nature paper.

For this research, his team developed a silicon chip that can control spin qubits at milli-kelvin temperatures. That’s just slightly above absolute zero (-273.15 degrees Celsius), the temperature at which – theoretically – matter ceases moving.

Of the many emerging qubit technologies, experts think that spin qubits (where information is encoded onto the magnetic direction of single electrons) could more easily scale up as they are based on common CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) technology that underpins modern conventional computing and is already used to print billions of transistors.

WORLD-FIRST SEMICONDUCTOR CONTROL SYSTEM INTEGRATED WITH QUBITS

However, spin qubits must be kept at temperatures below 1 kelvin to preserve their information. To scale-up they also need to be controlled and measured using complex, integrated electronics. This created a real concern that even if you could get the control system to work at that temperature, the heat and electrical interference generated by placing the control so close to the qubits would degrade their performance.

Professor Reilly’s team has, for the first time, shown that with careful design this need not be the case – a vital proof-of-principle demonstration that spin qubits in CMOS could be scaled up to the millions of qubits to make a useful machine.

Professor Reilly said: “This result has been more than a decade in the making, building-up the know-how to be able to design electronic systems that dissipate tiny amounts of power and operate near absolute zero. We have now demonstrated a scalable control platform that can be integrated with qubits without destroying the fragile quantum states.

“This validates the hope that indeed qubits can be controlled at scale by integrating complex electronics at cryogenic temperatures. Our paper shows that with careful design of the control system, fragile qubits hardly notice the switching of transistors in a chip less than a millimetre away.

GOOD SCIENCE, GOOD COMMERCIALISATION

The qubits were supplied by Diraq, a UNSW spin-out established by Professor Andrew Dzurak, and the know-how that enabled the University of Sydney-designed control chip will now carry over to underpin much of the work of the new company, Emergence Quantum, co-founded by Professor Reilly and Dr Thomas Ohki.

Professor Reilly said: “As well as good science, this is a a good commercialisation story, too, and is more evidence why Sydney is a vital cog in the global quantum industry.”

Lead author Dr Sam Bartee, who undertook experiments as a PhD student with Professor Reilly at the University of Sydney, is now working at Diraq.

He said: “It’s extremely exciting to be part of this work, to be involved in the development of such powerful technologies and to sit in this hotspot of quantum computing research. Sydney really is a remarkable place to be a quantum engineer to be at the moment.”

Dr Kushal Das was the lead designer of the control chip. He holds a joint position with the University of Sydney and Emergence Quantum.

Dr Das said: “Now that we have shown that milli-kelvin control does not degrade the performance of single- and two-qubit quantum gates, we expect many will follow our lead. Fortunately for us, this is not so easy but requires years to build up the know-how and expertise to design low-noise cryogenic electronics that needs only tiny amounts of power.”

Professor Reilly added: “Here we are showing the impact that cryogenic electronics can have on scaling up qubits, but we see many further diverse applications for this technology, spanning near-term sensing systems to the data centres of the future.”

Diraq CEO Professor Dzurak said: “This advance underpins Diraq’s goal of integrating our silicon qubits with classical control electronics in one compact package, opening the path to affordable quantum computers that consume much less energy.”

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Dr Bartee and his co-authors measured the performance characteristics of one- and two-qubit operations controlled by the cryo-CMOS chiplet. They compared its performance against that of a standard cable-connected room-temperature control system

Their findings include:

Negligible fidelity loss for single-qubit operations; No measurable reduction of the coherence time for one- and two-qubit operations; Comparable behaviour of qubit interactions, indicating negligible interference from electrical noise. Remarkably, these feats were achieved within a power envelope of just 10 microwatts, the vast majority of which was expended on the digital systems. The analogue components dissipate only around 20 nanowatts per megahertz, which means that the system can be scaled up to millions of qubits without a significant increase in power usage.

## ENDS ##

DOWNLOAD photos of Professor David Reilly, Dr Sam Bartee and Dr Kushal Das, and images of the control chip platform at this link.

INTERVIEWS

Professor David Reilly | david.reilly@sydney.edu.au | +61 412 258 252

MEDIA ENQUIRIES

Marcus Strom | marcus.strom@sydney.edu.au | +61 474 269 459

Outside of work hours, please call +61 2 8627 0246 (directs to a mobile number) or email media.office@sydney.edu.au.

RESEARCH

Bartee, S. et al ‘Spin-qubit control with a milli-Kelvin CMOS chip’ (Nature 2025) DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09157-x

FUNDING

This research was supported by Microsoft Corporation and by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems. We acknowledge support from the Australian Research Council, the US Army Research Office, the US Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the NSW Node of the Australian National Fabrication Facility as well as the Research and Prototype Foundry Core Research Facility at the University of Sydney, also part of the Australian National Fabrication Facility.

COMPETING INTERESTS

David Reilly is CEO and Director of Emergence Quantum. Kushal Das and Sebastian Pauka declare equity interest in Emergence Quantum. Andrew Dzurak is CEO and Director of Diraq, Sam Bartee, Will Gilbert, Tuomo Tanttu, Chih Hwan Yang, Nard Dumoulin Stuyck, Wee Han Lim, Christopher Escott, Fay Hudson and Arne Laucht declare equity interest in Diraq.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Immune cells promoting tumor growth? How dying cancer cells turn their enemies into allies

2025-06-25
Scientists at Nagoya University in Japan studied what happens when macrophages—a type of immune cell—encounter dying cancer cells in tumors and discovered a mechanism that accelerates tumor growth. When cancer cells begin to die within tumors, they expose signals on their surface that indicate they are dying. Macrophages then detect these signals and engage in phagocytosis, where they eat dying cancer cells. Using fruit flies as a model organism, the scientists found this triggers production of proteins called cytokines, which activate growth ...

How diverse brain cells reach a decision together

2025-06-25
Every decision begins invisibly. Long before someone acts, the brain is already hard at work gathering evidence, weighing options, and gradually committing to a choice. But even when faced with the same evidence, people can arrive at different outcomes, especially when the decision is difficult. Two different drivers in rush hour traffic, for example, see the same congested road, yet one might speed up to merge while another cautiously brakes. How the brain, made up of billions of specialized cells, makes ...

Pervasive surveillance of people is being used to access, monetize, coerce, and control

2025-06-25
New research has underlined the surprising extent to which pervasive surveillance of people and their habits is powered by computer vision research – and shone a spotlight on how vulnerable individuals and communities are at risk. Analyses of over 40,000 documents, computer vision (CV) papers and downstream patents spanning four decades has shown a five-fold increase in the number of computer vision papers linked to downstream surveillance patents. The work also highlights the rise of obfuscating language that is used to normalise and even hide the existence of surveillance.  The research, ...

New global index aims to help people and nature thrive together

2025-06-25
EMBARGOED UNTIL JUNE 25TH 16:00 UK TIME New Global Index Aims to Help People and Nature Thrive Together Researchers at Oxford University join the United Nations Development Programme to propose an optimistic, practical approach to inspire stronger action on nature. Oxford, 25 June 2025 — As the world faces an escalating planetary crisis, a new paper published today in Nature offers something we don’t often hear - hope. Rather than focussing on what we’re doing wrong, the paper proposes a bold new way forward; a global framework that measures how well people and nature are thriving together. The ...

Increased prescribing of ADHD medication and real-world outcomes over time

2025-06-25
About The Study: In this study, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) medication remained associated with reduced risks of several serious real-world outcomes (self-harm, unintentional injury, traffic crashes, and crime). However, the magnitude of these associations appears to have decreased alongside rising prescription rates over time. Thus, it is important to regularly evaluate medication use in different patient populations.  Corresponding Authors: To contact the corresponding authors, email Zheng Chang, PhD, (zheng.chang@ki.se) ...

New study shows how biomass changed over 500 million years

2025-06-25
In a first-of-its-kind study, Stanford researchers have measured how the abundance of ocean life has changed over the past half-billion years of Earth’s history.  Overall, the total mass of marine organisms has generally increased over the past 500 million years, the study showed, albeit with setbacks after major extinction events. The findings align with evidence for a similar rise in marine biodiversity – the total variety of organisms – over the past half-eon from studies dating as far back as the 19th century, suggesting an evolutionary connection between biomass and biodiversity. ...

Estimated 2023-2024 COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness in adults

2025-06-25
About The Study: In this case-control study of vaccine effectiveness, 2023-2024 COVID-19 vaccines were estimated to provide additional effectiveness against medically attended COVID-19, with the highest and most sustained estimates against critical illness. These results highlight the importance of receiving recommended COVID-19 vaccination for adults 18 years or older.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ruth Link-Gelles, PhD, MPH, email hzt7@cdc.gov. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link ...

City of Hope’s Dr. Yuman Fong delivers Lister Legacy Lecture, spotlighting surgical cancer innovations

2025-06-25
LOS ANGELES — Yuman Fong, M.D., chair of the Department of Surgery at City of Hope®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States with its National Medical Center named a Top 5 “Best Hospital” in the nation for cancer care by U.S. News & World Report, this month delivered the Lister Legacy Lecture at the triennial conference of The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. This presentation honors the long-term impact of Baron Joseph Lister, M.D., who brought antiseptic ...

Creation of new molecule could help develop stamp-sized hard drives capable of storing 100 times more data than current tech

2025-06-25
Chemists from The University of Manchester and The Australian National University (ANU) have engineered a new type of molecule that can store information at temperatures as cold as the dark side of the moon at night, with major implications for the future of data storage technologies.   The findings, published in Nature, could pave the way for next-generation hardware about the size of a postage stamp that can store 100 times more digital data than current technologies.  “The ...

COVID vaccine reduces severity of illness, death for adults, especially among at-risk populations

2025-06-25
A new multi-state study led by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) VISION Network – including Regenstrief Institute – has provided the most comprehensive assessment to date of the effectiveness of 2023-2024 COVID-19 vaccines among adults in the U.S. during the XBB and JN.1 Omicron subvariant waves. Data suggest that receiving updated COVID-19 vaccines remains crucial, especially for older adults and those at increased risk for severe outcomes, and underscores the additional protection provided ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Terasaki Institute’s Dr. Yangzhi Zhu recognized as 2024 Biosensors Young Investigator Award Recipient

NAU researchers launch open-source robotic exoskeleton to help people walk

Early farmers in the Andes were doing just fine, challenging popular theory

Seeing men as the “default” may be tied to attitudes to politicians, Black people

Risk of crime rises when darkness falls

Data from Poland, Indonesia and Nepal indicate that affectionate behavior is associated with higher relationship satisfaction - though cultural differences impact how affection is displayed and percei

"Boomerang" made from mammoth tusk is likely one of the oldest known in Europe at around 40,000 years old, per analysis of this artifact from a Polish Upper Paleolithic cave

"Shrinking" cod: how humans have altered the genetic make-up of fish

Nitrate in drinking water linked to preterm birth rates

Ancient canoe replica tests Paleolithic migration theory

Eight-month-old babies can adapt their learning style to change

Baby talk – a human superpower?

Molecular-level discovery about heart mechanisms could lead to new heart disease treatments

Study links air pollutant to year-round respiratory health in Jackson

Computational trick enables better understanding of exotic state of matter

Professional responsibility for COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy

Landmark study uncovers role of tumor microenvironment in nasopharyngeal carcinoma progression which supports personalized treatment

Control of spin qubits at near absolute zero a game changer for quantum computers

Immune cells promoting tumor growth? How dying cancer cells turn their enemies into allies

How diverse brain cells reach a decision together

Pervasive surveillance of people is being used to access, monetize, coerce, and control

New global index aims to help people and nature thrive together

Increased prescribing of ADHD medication and real-world outcomes over time

New study shows how biomass changed over 500 million years

Estimated 2023-2024 COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness in adults

City of Hope’s Dr. Yuman Fong delivers Lister Legacy Lecture, spotlighting surgical cancer innovations

Creation of new molecule could help develop stamp-sized hard drives capable of storing 100 times more data than current tech

COVID vaccine reduces severity of illness, death for adults, especially among at-risk populations

Can targeted payment adjustments help solve the infectious disease physician shortage?

Scientists discover unknown organelle inside our cells

[Press-News.org] Control of spin qubits at near absolute zero a game changer for quantum computers
University-industry collaboration to accelerate scale up of quantum machines