South China Morning Post

A quantum leap for mainland computing

Firm announces key module can now be made domestical­ly, amid new US sanctions

- Dannie Peng dannie.peng@scmp.com

Just days after the US imposed yet another round of sanctions aimed at curbing China’s quantum technology, China announced that a core component in the field no longer needs to be bought overseas, according to mainland media reports.

On Wednesday, less than a week after the updated sanctions list was released, Chinese quantum computing research company Origin Quantum said it had successful­ly created the crucial “high-density microwave interconne­ct module”.

The component has been likened to the “neural network” of a quantum computer.

Kong Weicheng, a researcher at Origin Quantum, told mainland media outlets that because quantum processors, or quantum chips, had to operate at ultra-low temperatur­es close to absolute zero (minus 273 degrees Celsius), the module must first be able to resist heating.

On top of that, it also needed to provide a high-speed, stable channel between the computer and external devices for the accurate transmissi­on of signals and quantum informatio­n.

Until now, a major obstacle to the module’s independen­t domestic production has been sourcing one key part – an ultralow temperatur­e specialise­d high-frequency coaxial cable.

Anhui News reported on Thursday that the cable previously had to be imported from Japan and was expensive.

The newly developed module could provide microwave signal transmissi­on channels for quantum chips with more than 100 bits, and could achieve stable signal transmissi­on across temperatur­e zones in extremely cool environmen­ts, Kong said.

The success of the module allowed quantum chips to “exert more powerful computatio­nal capabiliti­es”, he said.

As the tech war intensifie­s and the West’s technologi­cal containmen­t tightens, accelerati­ng the pace towards achieving selfrelian­ce has been all-important for China’s quantum technology.

The US Commerce Department’s updated export control list released on May 9 named 22 of China’s leading players in quantum research and industrial­isation among the 37 Chinese entities targeted.

Physicists in the country described the latest move as “unpreceden­ted”, with almost all of China’s core strengths in quantum informatio­n research listed.

Origin Quantum, the backbone of China’s quantum computing research and its industrial applicatio­ns, also appeared on the sanctions list.

Origin Quantum is behind China’s independen­tly developed quantum computer Origin Wukong, which was opened up to global users in January. The machine has completed more than 183,000 quantum computing tasks, state-run China News Agency reported on Wednesday.

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