Nobel Laureate and Tech Giants Form Alliance to Build Mass-Produced Quantum Supercomputers
Nobel Prize-winning physicist John M. Martinis has teamed up with Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and leading semiconductor companies to launch an ambitious initiative to build the world’s first mass-producible quantum supercomputer.
The collaboration, called the Quantum Scaling Alliance, brings together Applied Materials, Synopsys, 1QBit, Quantum Machines, Riverlane, and the University of Wisconsin. Its goal is to transition quantum computing from bespoke, laboratory-scale devices into scalable systems that can be manufactured using the same industrial tools that produce millions of chips for smartphones, laptops, and AI servers.
“Quantum chips have been made in an artisanal way for decades — small batches, one at a time. Now it’s time to move to a standard professional model,” Martinis told Reuters.
Quantum computers exploit qubits, which can exist in multiple states simultaneously, enabling them to perform complex calculations exponentially faster than traditional machines. The alliance aims to overcome one of the key barriers in the field — scaling quantum systems while maintaining stability and error correction.
HPE’s quantum team, led by Masoud Mohseni, is working on the integration of quantum and classical computing systems — a critical step toward achieving large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum machines.
“People think that once you have hundreds or thousands of qubits, you can easily scale to millions. That’s just not true. Each scale brings new challenges,” Mohseni explained.
By uniting expertise in chip manufacturing, software design, and computing architecture, the Quantum Scaling Alliance hopes to create the foundation for commercially viable quantum supercomputers — machines capable of tackling problems in chemistry, medicine, materials science, and cryptography that are currently beyond reach.


