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Australian Government invests $1,942,350 to pioneer quantum supply chain capabilities
A partnership between The University of Sydney and Emergence Quantum will position Australia as a leader in the global quantum supply chain by pioneering scalable superconducting amplifier manufacturing.
This project will foster cross-school synergy between the teams led by Dr. Thomas Ohki in the School of Engineering and Professor David Reilly in the School of Physics. Emergence Quantum is committed to building a strong partnership with the University of Sydney, recognizing the significant opportunity for deep research engagement and workforce development through initiatives like this. Dr. Cassandra Chua, a researcher in the School of Physics, will lead project management and coordinate the collaborative efforts with Emergence Quantum. Dr. Abdallah El Kass, a researcher in the School of Electrical and Information Engineering, will lead the technical development effort.
The $1,942,350 project will establish sovereign Australian capabilities in this growing area — without high-performance quantum amplifiers, scalable quantum computing is not feasible.
Emergence Quantum will pioneer scalable manufacturing and packaging of superconducting amplifiers for defence, intelligence and scientific applications as well as a growing market from major players like AWS, IBM, Google and Microsoft to local startups such as Diraq. Quantum systems will potentially require thousands of units per stack by 2026.
This is one of 39 research projects being supported through the Albanese Government’s Australia’s Economic Accelerator (AEA) Innovate program, collectively worth more than $93 million.
AEA Innovate grants are awarded to university-linked institutions to fast-track commercialisation of Australian research in critical areas like renewables, agriculture, medical technology, defence and critical minerals, bridging the gap between research and real-world application.
Read more about AEA.
Read more about scalable fabrication.