DOE's Quantum Platform to Double U.S. Scientific Productivity with $625M Investment

November 14, 2025
DOE's Quantum Platform to Double U.S. Scientific Productivity with $625M Investment
  • Phase II funding further extends the five National QIS Centers, broadening collaboration to include international partners and industry collaborators.

  • The centers collectively work toward a quantum-enabled platform that accelerates scientific discovery through practical quantum computing.

  • A successful quantum-enabled platform would advance energy, chemistry, national security, and broad scientific discovery, reinforcing U.S. economic leadership for decades.

  • The 2028 milestone envisions a first-of-its-kind instrument capable of meaningful scientific calculations through fault-tolerant quantum computing.

  • This platform aims to include a fault-tolerant quantum computer capable of meaningful scientific calculations, accelerating discovery across energy, chemistry, and other fields.

  • DOE renews and expands support for the National QIS Research Centers, authorizing up to $625 million to power a collaborative network spanning more than 50 institutions, 22 states plus DC, international partners, and 18 industry partners.

  • A new, unified platform for U.S. science is envisioned, led by the Department of Energy, integrating AI, classical HPC, and quantum computing to double the nation’s scientific productivity within a decade.

  • Public-private partnerships are essential to accelerate quantum tech and sustain U.S. leadership, with recent collaborations between the DOE, AI companies, and industry to build AI-ready supercomputers at Oak Ridge and Argonne.

  • The National QIS Research Centers began in 2018 under the National Quantum Initiative and have driven advances in qubit materials, algorithms, and training hundreds of scientists and thousands of trainees.

  • DOE intends to apply quantum computing to a broad range of applications, from energy innovations to advanced chemistry simulations, with the potential to surpass classical methods in certain domains.

  • Overall, the mission is to create an integrated discovery platform that strengthens national security, energy goals, and economic leadership for the decades ahead.

  • Under Secretary Darío Gil outlines Phase II goals to overcome quantum roadblocks, reduce noise, enable scalable networks, and develop real-world algorithms that push quantum utility forward.

  • The quantum investment strategy continues to build a national QIS ecosystem linking research centers, labs, universities, and industry partnerships.

  • Phase II centers focus on removing barriers to quantum utility by reducing errors, enabling modular, scalable networks, and creating new algorithms for practical applications.

  • DOE highlights a legacy of leadership in computing and quantum R&D, including exascale achievements and access to 28 User Facilities for researchers at no cost for published work.

  • A primary objective is to deliver a quantum-centric high-performance computer with fault tolerance and millions of gate depths by 2028, moving beyond current NISQ limits.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

Powering the Future of Quantum | Newswise

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