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Quantum Engineering Initiative

Building and expanding the College of Engineering and Applied Science's efforts into quantum research and strengthening connections to our local and regional partners. 

Developing the next generation of quantum engineering science and technology

Created in 2021, the initiative is a significant and strategic investment into translational quantum engineering research – especially in the field of quantum sensing, which has been a strength in the college for years. QEI specifically includes educational components, faculty hiring efforts, and dedicated lab space for collaboration with partners both on and off 91´«Ã½â€™s campus.

QEI was created to:

  • Organize and support engineering faculty expertise and foster new and ongoing collaborations with external partners, including national laboratories in and around Boulder, Colorado.
  • Organize and support new faculty hires, as well as adjoint faculty appointments for National Institute of Standards and Technology researchers. 
  • Develop and define the next generation of quantum engineering science and technology discoveries.
  • Grow the quantum workforce through educational and interdisciplinary research opportunities for students of all backgrounds and disciplines.
  • Create technology transfer outreach and programs specifically tailored to quantum science and engineering.

91´«Ã½ and Elevate Quantum Consortium designated Quantum Information Technology Hub by U.S. Secretary of Commerce

91´«Ã½ and the coming quantum revolution  

QEI is a new arm of the campus wide CUbit Quantum Initiative, which supports the university and state of Colorado’s prominence in quantum information science and technology. 

QEI’s roots date back to 2019, when the College of Engineering and Applied Science created an Interdisciplinary Research Theme around quantum to provide seed grants, help with team formation, and hire additional faculty members towards developing translational research. Initial work done by that group helped campus land a $25 million center in 2020. Q-SEnSe aims to advance quantum science and is funded by the National Science Foundation in partnership with 11 other organizations around the U.S. and abroad. 

The college took another bold step forward in the field in 2021 by hiring Professor Scott Diddams and other prominent quantum researchers. Diddams has served at NIST for the past two decades and conducted prominent experimental research in the field of optical frequency combs and quantum metrology with application to atomic clocks and sensors.

Other recent hires into the college in the field of quantum include Assistant Professor András Gyenis and Assistant Professor Josh Combes. All three professors are based in the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering and are part of a multi-year faculty recruitment plan.

Today, CU researchers and their collaborators continue to lay the groundwork, with research centers like Ìý²¹²Ô»åÌýQuantum Systems through Entangled Science and Engineering (Q-SEnSE). These efforts are helping to transform the state into a new Silicon Valley, only this time, a Quantum Valley.

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