
Quantinuum has been selected as a founding collaborator for the NVIDIA Accelerated Quantum Research Center (NVAQC), where operations are set to begin later this year. The collaboration aims to develop quantum solutions and applications to address significant global challenges.
The NVAQC will utilize NVIDIA’s CUDA-Q platform and a NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 supercomputer alongside Quantinuum’s System H2, which has a Quantum Volume of 2,097,152, significantly surpassing the nearest competitor. Broomfield-based Quantinuum’s quantum computing architecture focuses on delivering rapid solutions and will continue to advance with next-generation systems.
By 2027, Quantinuum plans to introduce the industry’s first 100-logical-qubit system with leading error rates. By the end of the decade, the company aims to deliver commercially scalable quantum computers featuring hundreds of logical qubits. These advancements stem from recent innovations, including the development of high-quality logical qubits and addressing scalability issues in ion-trap quantum computers, resulting in a commercial system with over 99.9% two-qubit gate fidelity.
In 2022, Quantinuum was the first to integrate CUDA-Q into its quantum systems, fostering a collaboration that enhances application development and Quantum Error Correction (QEC). Currently, users have access to Quantinuum’s System H1 QPU and emulator for 90 days through CUDA-Q. Future systems will support CUDA-Q and be available via the NVAQC, which will facilitate the adoption of Generative Quantum AI (Gen QAI).
Quantinuum’s recently announced Gen QAI system enables data from its quantum systems to improve AI models, allowing them to address previously intractable problems. This initiative establishes a new standard for AI training and problem-solving across various industries.
“By combining NVIDIA’s AI hardware and software solutions with leading and differentiated solutions from Quantinuum, we’re unlocking unprecedented solutions and accelerating Generative Quantum AI’s adoption across diverse markets,” said Rajeeb Hazra, president and CEO of Quantinuum.
Santa Clara, Calif. – March 18, 2025 – Quantinuum has been selected as a founding collaborator for the NVIDIA Accelerated Quantum Research Center (NVAQC), where operations are set to begin later this year. The collaboration aims to develop quantum solutions and applications to address significant global challenges.
The NVAQC will utilize NVIDIA’s CUDA-Q platform and a NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 supercomputer alongside Quantinuum’s System H2, which has a Quantum Volume of 2,097,152, significantly surpassing the nearest competitor. Quantinuum’s quantum computing architecture focuses on delivering rapid solutions and will continue to advance with next-generation systems.
By 2027, Quantinuum plans to introduce the industry’s first 100-logical-qubit system with leading error rates. By the end of the decade, the company aims to deliver commercially scalable quantum computers featuring hundreds of logical qubits. These advancements stem from recent innovations, including the development of high-quality logical qubits and addressing scalability issues in ion-trap quantum computers, resulting in a commercial system with over 99.9% two-qubit gate fidelity.
In 2022, Quantinuum was the first to integrate CUDA-Q into its quantum systems, fostering a collaboration that enhances application development and Quantum Error Correction (QEC). Currently, users have access to Quantinuum’s System H1 QPU and emulator for 90 days through CUDA-Q. Future systems will support CUDA-Q and be available via the NVAQC, which will facilitate the adoption of Generative Quantum AI (Gen QAI).
Quantinuum’s recently announced Gen QAI system enables data from its quantum systems to improve AI models, allowing them to address previously intractable problems. This initiative establishes a new standard for AI training and problem-solving across various industries.
“By combining NVIDIA’s AI hardware and software solutions with leading and differentiated solutions from Quantinuum, we’re unlocking unprecedented solutions and accelerating Generative Quantum AI’s adoption across diverse markets,” said Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, President and CEO of Quantinuum.


