Samsung (Quantum Research)
Samsung's Advanced Institute of Technology (SAIT) and Samsung Research operate quantum computing research programs focused on quantum semiconductors, superconducting qubit fabrication, and quantum error correction algorithms. Samsung Ventures has invested in quantum startups including PQShield (via Mirise/Toyota-Denso). South Korea's $2.3 billion quantum investment by 2035 positions Samsung as a potential manufacturer of quantum chips at scale, leveraging its semiconductor fabrication expertise. Samsung is also a customer of ID Quantique's QRNG chips, integrating them into smartphones.
- Country
- South Korea
- Founded
- 1969
- Qubit Modality
- Superconducting
- Stage
- Public
Stock · KRX: 005930
News
Related companies
Quantum Machines
Enabling TechQuantum Machines develops the OPX+ pulse processor — a purpose-built classical processor for real-time quantum control that handles the precise pulse sequences needed to manipulate qubits. The company's Quantum Orchestration Platform provides low-latency feedback loops essential for error correction. Quantum Machines works across all qubit modalities and has partnerships with major quantum computing labs worldwide. It is part of NVIDIA's NVQLink ecosystem for GPU-QPU integration.
Qblox
Enabling TechQblox is a QuTech spin-out that engineers scalable control electronics for quantum computers. Its modular Cluster system provides high-fidelity microwave control and readout for superconducting, spin, and NV center qubits. Qblox supplied the control stack for the Q-PAC system (the first commercially deployable open-architecture quantum computer in the US) and was selected by DOE/Fermilab to manufacture the QICK quantum control platform. Partners include Bluefors (cryogenic integration), Q-CTRL (calibration), and QuantWare.
Zurich Instruments
Enabling TechZurich Instruments introduced the first commercial Quantum Computing Control System (QCCS) in 2018 and remains a leading provider of test and measurement instrumentation for quantum computing. Acquired by Rohde & Schwarz (a $3B test-and-measurement company), Zurich Instruments benefits from global service infrastructure and deep RF engineering expertise. The QCCS was selected for Fujitsu and RIKEN's 256-qubit superconducting system in Japan. The system operates directly at qubit frequencies without mixer calibration.
Keysight Technologies
Enabling TechKeysight is a $30B+ market cap test and measurement company (spun out of Agilent/HP) that has developed quantum control solutions alongside its core electronic measurement business. Keysight provides arbitrary waveform generators, digitizers, and signal analyzers used across quantum computing labs worldwide. It is part of NVIDIA's NVQLink partner ecosystem for GPU-QPU integration and serves as the 'picks and shovels' play for quantum — its instruments are needed regardless of which qubit modality wins.