This collaboration paves the way for fault‑tolerant, large‑scale quantum computers by linking individual QPUs, a critical step for commercial quantum workloads. It also positions Europe as a leader in quantum infrastructure and creates high‑value jobs.
Neutral‑atom platforms have emerged as a compelling route to quantum advantage because they combine long coherence times with scalable optical control. Yet single‑processor architectures confront a practical ceiling around ten thousand physical qubits, limiting the complexity of algorithms they can run. By converting qubit states into photons and routing them through optical fibers, quantum networking promises to stitch together multiple processors, effectively creating a distributed quantum computer that can exceed this ceiling while preserving error‑correction capabilities.
The Pasqal‑Welinq alliance leverages this principle through the InterQo program, a €4 million initiative co‑funded by regional French agencies. Pasqal is redesigning its vacuum chambers to embed photonic interfaces directly within its QPUs, while Welinq contributes a waveguide‑QED‑based entanglement source that functions as a quantum Ethernet port. Together they address two technical bottlenecks: efficient photon extraction from neutral‑atom arrays and high‑rate, low‑loss entanglement distribution across processors. Early prototypes aim to demonstrate seamless entanglement swapping between QPUs in European HPC facilities, laying the groundwork for production‑grade, network‑ready quantum nodes.
Beyond the laboratory, the partnership signals a strategic shift for the European quantum ecosystem. By delivering a full‑stack solution—from hardware and photonic interconnects to software for algorithm partitioning—Pasqal and Welinq enable data‑center operators to integrate quantum accelerators alongside classical infrastructure. This not only accelerates the commercialization of quantum workloads in optimization, simulation, and AI but also strengthens Europe’s position in the global quantum supply chain, fostering high‑skill employment and attracting further investment in quantum technologies.
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