A rapidly emerging consensus in the scientific community predicts the future will be defined by humanity’s ability to exploit the laws of quantum mechanics.
In other words, the development of quantum-based devices and technologies will likely drive the bulk of scientific innovation in the near term, and potentially the long term as well.
This race for quantum competency holds massive implications for the United States’ economic and national security, and the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory is poised to lead the way.
ORNL’s research in quantum information science, or QIS, goes back more than two decades and has netted 20-plus patents that are issued or pending.
This success in quantum innovation has enabled the formation of three distinct but connected research groups dedicated to advancing quantum computing, networking, and sensing. These groups, together numbering more than 30 researchers and growing, are now consolidated under a single quantum umbrella known as the Quantum Information Science section, which is led by Nick Peters.
“ORNL is developing the science needed to form the foundation of the US’s future quantum industries,” said Peters. “We look forward to a day where quantum networks secure critical infrastructure, quantum computers personalize medicine, and quantum sensors reveal what we currently cannot see in the universe.”
Another 20 ORNL researchers are dedicated to the study of quantum materials, providing a critical, collaborative backbone for the QIS section’s three research areas.
This growing knowledge base draws on some of the world’s most advanced scientific instruments, including the soon to be launched Frontier supercomputer, which will be the nation’s first exascale system, and the Spallation Neutron Source, the world’s most powerful pulsed accelerator-based neutron scattering facility.
These investments in expertise, coupled with a world-class research infrastructure, proved critical to the laboratory’s launch last year of the five-year, $115 million Quantum Science Center, one of five DOE-funded National Quantum Information Science Research Centers.
ORNL’s unique quantum capabilities and strategic partnerships, including with Purdue University, Microsoft, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Fermilab, are enabling the QSC to overcome key roadblocks in quantum state resilience, controllability, and ultimately the scalability of quantum technologies via the sharing of resources across the national labs, industry, and academia.
ORNL’s quantum efforts are further buttressed by unique research agreements such as the laboratory’s Quantum Computing User Program, which allows ORNL staff and partner institutions access to a variety of quantum computers including systems from IBM, Honeywell Quantum Solutions, and Rigetti to test the viability and resilience for applications critical to DOE. Such an undertaking suits the laboratory’s strengths, as the user program falls under the auspices of the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, home to Frontier.