Welcome to Singapore's
National Quantum Computing Hub
The National Quantum Computing Hub will drive a new collaboration
Welcome to Singapore's
National Quantum Computing Hub
The National Quantum Computing Hub will drive a new collaboration
Engage with us
Quantum computers have the potential to outperform today’s supercomputers in speed and energy efficiency because they handle data in wholly new ways. They may also bring a real quantum advantage: solving hard problems in fields from finance to chemistry that today’s supercomputers simply cannot.
Access
Access to quantum computers and quantum simulators
Collaborate
Join us in developing hardware, software and applications
Learn
Get started with online courses at Quantum Talent or contact us for training in person
If you would like a basic understanding of quantum computing before you go further, start here.
What we do
Applications
Quantum computers have the potential to offer tremendous improvements in performance for computational problems.
Middleware
Quantum computers need a sophisticated software stack to transform high-level code to physical actions on qubits.
Hardware
The Hub offers access to commercial cloud quantum computing and local supercomputers. The Hub also has the goal of providing a quantum computer in Singapore.
About us
The National Quantum Computing Hub is a joint initiative of the Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT) at the National University of Singapore, the Institute of High Performance Computing (IHPC) at the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) and the National Supercomputing Centre (NSCC) Singapore.
Hub news and events
Algorithm calculates bond energies for quantum chemistry
A team including researchers from National Quantum Computing Hub partner organisations has designed a new algorithm for quantum chemistry. The algorithm calculates electronic correlation energies in a way that could be implemented on noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers.
Quantum Bootcamp 2023 culminates in presentations on industry use-cases
“The students have done well to dive into the field and complete the program. We look forward to seeing where and how they will bring their training to the next level in the quantum ecosystem," said José Ignacio Latorre, Lead Principal Investigator for the NQCH.
Drop us a message
Making quantum computing work for Singapore and the world