Deeptech/News/ QuantrolOx raises €10.5m to stabilise quantum computers The startup is getting ready to launch its tuning software for quantum computers, which aims to solve a key pain point when it comes to scaling the tech By Clara Rodríguez Fernández 14 October 2022 QuantrolOx team QuantrolOx team \Deeptech Russia's war prompts 'emotional' defence tech rise in CEE countries By Zosia Wanat 27 January 2023 Deeptech/News/ QuantrolOx raises €10.5m to stabilise quantum computers The startup is getting ready to launch its tuning software for quantum computers, which aims to solve a key pain point when it comes to scaling the tech By Clara Rodríguez Fernández 14 October 2022 Quantum computers promise to do lots of things that classical computers can’t. But they face a big roadblock: instability. “If you look at classical computers, they are very stable. They will stay on for years as long as there is power,” says Vishal Chatrath, CEO and cofounder of Oxford-based startup QuantrolOx. Quantum computers, on the other hand, require constant manual tuning, which is time-consuming and difficult. As a result, they spend much more time being tuned than actually being used. QuantrolOx wants to automate this process using machine learning. Its software monitors and adjusts dozens of different parameters every microsecond, which helps increase the useful time the computers are in operation. It runs on classical computers and is designed to scale along with quantum computers. It’s just raised €10.5m from the European Innovation Council (EIC) — which says that the company is “of strategic importance for EU sovereignty in quantum computing” — and will use the cash to support the launch of its product in 2023. Out of the total investment, €2.5m is grant money that the company will receive upfront, and €8m will be available to the startup in exchange for equity at a later date, and can be unlocked when it receives matching investments from other sources — EIC will match VC investment up to €8m, and that can be spread across several rounds. So if in the future QuantrolOx needed to raise €10m, it would only need to raise €5m from VCs, and that would be matched by €5m from the EIC — the remaining €3m can be accessed in the same way at a later date. QuantrolOx raised £1.4m in a seed round led by Nielsen Ventures and Hoxton Ventures earlier this year and has 17 employees. The current state of quantum computing Quantum computing is now where classical computers were in the 60s and 70s, and countries around the world are racing to establish the standards that will be used as the quantum industry grows. Today, working quantum computers have just over 100 qubits of processing power, but in the future they will have thousands and eventually even millions of qubits. Manual tuning just can’t scale to these numbers. According to Chatrath, the EIC’s funding scheme fits well with the needs of deeptech companies, which usually find it harder to raise equity than startups in other tech sectors. Particularly in Europe, investors tend to be averse to investing first in deeptech startups — having matching funding available can make a risky deeptech startup more attractive. “It is harder to attract capital for deeptech in Europe than in the US. Support like this from the EU is a great way to de-risk the investment,” Chatrath tells Sifted. Clara Rodríguez Fernández is Sifted’s deeptech reporter, based in Berlin. Follow her on LinkedIn here. *** Looking for digestible insights into the quantum computing sector? Sifted’s Pro Briefing on the industry will get you up to speed fast on what you need to know. Check out what Pro membership can offer you here. Related Articles Europe’s space sector has lift off: Satellite launcher startup Isar Aerospace lands exclusive deal By Miriam Partington in Berlin Click here to read more Latvian startup Lokalise raises $50m to streamline localisation and translation By Kit Gillet Click here to read more UK founder Terry Walby on getting acquired by automation giant Blue Prism By Michael Stothard Click here to read more Selling to businesses is hard, selling to the military is harder By Marie Mawad in Paris Click here to read more Most Read 1 \Venture Capital How to raise a $33m Series A during an economic downturn 2 \Fintech Six fintech ideas VCs want you to pitch in 2023 3 \Deeptech Europe’s most active deeptech investors 4 \Deeptech Europe’s generative AI startups, mapped 5 \Consumer 20 foodtech startups to watch, according to investors
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