Quantum Computing Startup Oxford Ionics Raises £30M in Series A Funding

Oxford Ionics – the startup solving the critical scalability issues facing the future of quantum computing, has raised £30 million in Series A funding from some of the “world’s leading” quantum and tech investors.

The investment round was “led by Oxford Science Enterprises and Braavos Investment Advisers. Lansdowne Partners, Prosus Ventures, 2xN, Torch Partners and Hermann Hauser (founder of chip giant ARM) also participated.”

Founded in 2019 by Dr Chris Ballance and Dr Tom Harty, Oxford Ionics takes a unique approach “to designing and scaling one of the most promising quantum computing technologies – trapped-ions.”

As multiple technologies vie for position in our race for a quantum future, trapped-ions “have long proved superior.” The highest-performing quantum systems to date “have all been powered by trapped-ions, and of those systems Oxford Ionics’ has been shown to consistently outperform the others.”

In tests, Oxford Ionics’ trapped-ion technology “holds world records for the highest performance quantum operations, longest quantum coherence time, and highest performance quantum network.” It has also “achieved the highest performance ever demonstrated while using chips manufactured on a semiconductor production line.”

Dr Chris Ballance, co-founder of Oxford Ionics said:

“If we’re to identify and unlock the true power and potential of quantum computing we need to crack the critical issues that are holding it back – scalability, integration and performance. Our unique trapped-ion approach has been developed to address all three. At Oxford Ionics, we’re focused on building technologies that will help quantum computing finish the race, not just take small, incremental steps. Our latest round of funding, and the knowledge, insight and expertise of our new investors bring us even closer to this goal.”

Oxford Ionics’ dominance “stems from the firm’s pioneering approach. Until now, trapped–ion systems have largely relied on lasers to control qubits.” This approach performs “well for small processors, but becomes untenable and error prone as the size of the processor scales, and the number of qubits increases.”

Instead of lasers, Oxford Ionics’ trapped-ion processors “use a proprietary, patented Electronic Qubit Control (EQC) system to control the qubits.” This allows them “to combine the unrivaled quantum performance of individual atoms with the scalability and reliability of electronics integrated into silicon chips.”

Not only does this approach deliver the highest level of performance possible, it does so in a way that “makes the Oxford Ionics processors integrable and scalable as standard – a first for any quantum computing technology.”

The startup has even “proven the potential of this approach in a real-world environment, via its partnership with semiconductor manufacturer Infineon Technologies AG on its standard production line.”

Such is the team’s authority in this space, Dr Chris Ballance’s research into experimental quantum key distribution “was cited in the scientific release that accompanied this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics.”

Today, the Oxford Ionics team is “made up of the brightest minds across the quantum sector who between them have over 100 years’ of expertise in this space; 10 PhDs and more than 130 peer-reviewed scientific publications.”

This team has “grown 10-fold over the past three years and it’s its combination of pioneering vision and deep expertise that has seen it attract some of the leading quantum and tech investors of the past three decades.”

Before co-founding the quantum-inspired venture capital firm 2xN, investor Niels Nielsen “was an early backer, and former chairman of Cambridge Quantum.”

Cambridge Quantum recently “merged with Honeywell Quantum Solutions to form Quantinuum, one of the world’s largest integrated quantum computing companies. Fellow Oxford Ionics’ investor, Hermann Hauser founded chip giant ARM and was an early backer of quantum technologies.”

This latest funding round will be “used to further Oxford Ionics’ expansion with the hiring of people in roles across the company’s functions.”

Will Goodlad from Oxford Science Enteprises said:

“Through its unique approach, developed by some of the world’s best minds in the quantum space, Oxford Ionics is laying the foundations to finally make quantum computing a scalable, integrable and viable option. Building on more than a decade at the forefront of this sector, Chris, Tom and the team have been able to demonstrate, time and again, that their work in the lab can, and will, extend to the real world and we’re thrilled to be joining them on this journey.”

Niels Nielsen, co-founder of 2xN said:

“Quantum computing opens up the next frontier in computing power for many industries yet getting there requires the development of qubit technologies that can be built at a massive scale. All without sacrificing power, and while keeping error levels to a minimum. Oxford Ionics’ EQC technology offers a path to bringing the power and potential of trapped ion qubits and integrating it into classical semiconductor processes.”

Oxford Ionics’ latest funding round “takes the total raised by the startup to £37 million.”



Sponsored Links by DQ Promote

 

 

Send this to a friend