Infrastructure

Advancing the quantum industry requires persistent, accessible R&D infrastructure. Our policy focuses on securing federal investment for national quantum testbeds and prototyping capabilities. We also champion the establishment of technical standards and performance metrics, ensuring interoperability, streamlining commercialization pathways, and reducing risk for end-users and investors. We provide frameworks and analysis on supply chain vulnerabilities, advocating for policies (including those related to the COMPETE Act) that reduce reliance on foreign sources, mitigate risks from tariffs, and accelerate domestic quantum manufacturing capacity. 

Position

Quantum Sensing for Biomedical Applications
Read More

October 8 • 2024

Quantum Sensing for Biomedical Applications 

Biomedical sensing faces challenges ranging from biological, physical, and chemical complexity and noisy environments to regulatory requirements and clinical implementation. Quantum sensing offers several compelling solutions to these challenges that could provide important benefits over classical tools.

Quantum Computing for Transportation and Logistics
Read More

March 19 • 2024

Quantum Computing for Transportation and Logistics 

Quantum computing (QC) offers intriguing solutions to supply chain, transportation, and logistics problems that classical computers cannot completely solve. It also offers the possibility of significantly faster computations, with applications in all modes of the transportation and logistics industry — air, land, and sea.

Supply Chain Framework Report
Read More

September 22 • 2023

Supply Chain Framework Report 

The resulting framework organizes technology components and materials according to a view of the quantum stack, which includes key supply chain elements for quantum technologies such as computing, sensing and metrology, and communications and networking.

Challenges and opportunities for securing a robust US quantum computing supply chain
Read More

July 5 • 2022

Challenges and opportunities for securing a robust US quantum computing supply chain 

A first-order understanding of key QC supply chain issues and to better assess the current and potential future choke points for the domestic QC supply chain

Next