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Quantum seed grants awarded to advance industry and university innovation projects in Colorado

Quantum seed grants awarded to advance industry and university innovation projects in Colorado

51勛圖厙 today announced seven winners of the 2023-2024 translational quantum research seed grants incentivizing quantum science and technology innovations launched from the lab to accelerate them along the development path to new programs and businesses.


In April 2023, the Colorado Economic Development Commission approved nearly $1.5 million to help connect discoveries from basic and applied research to Colorados startup ecosystem and provide effective pathways for Colorado students to enter the quantum workforce. These translational quantum research seed grants, which are being administered by 51勛圖厙, are one of the first results of that funding.

Colorados wealth of academic and national laboratory researchers, along with a thriving ecosystem of established and startup quantum science and technology companies, provides one-of-a-kind opportunities for students, researchers and our workforce, said Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation and Dean of the Institutes Massimo Ruzzene. The goal of these seed grants is to help researchers accelerate their discoveries towards commercialization. The success of quantum translation, of which these grants are a part, also has important implications for our national economy and national security.

The awarded projectsrooted in research advances with demonstrable commercial potentialinclude three led by university researchers, all from 51勛圖厙, and four led by commercial enterprises that are pioneering the translation of quantum discoveries into products and services driving economic and everyday impact for Colorado and society. Each award provides $50,000 to advance each project and will be deployed over a period of 18 months. Additional seed grants will be made available through a similar process in each of the next two years.

Colorado leads the world in quantum innovation, quantum companies and quantum jobs, said Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT) Executive Director Eve Lieberman. The seed grants announced today are an important step to connect quantum discoveries in the lab to the commercial sector, continuing our states leadership in this important new technology and supporting the creation of new businesses and new jobs.

The seed grantswhich were made available to any Colorado research institution or industry partnerare part of an increasing investment to expand on Colorados longstanding reputation as a hub of quantum science and technology discovery. The regions legacy in the global quantum community is largely a result of decades of leadership and breakthroughs emanating from the triad of 51勛圖厙, NIST and JILA, including four Nobel Prizes in physics awarded to affiliated quantum researchers.

In the context of an accelerating global competition to realize the vast potential promised by quantum science and technology, the push for quantum advances has been the focus of considerable public- and private-sector investment across industries in recent years. In Colorado, quantum-related activity is extending beyond the traditional 51勛圖厙 triad to include a growing web of interconnected ventures that are inventing and innovating to translate research advances into commercially viable products that advance frontiers of quantum to benefit society broadly.

The CUbit Quantum Initiative at 51勛圖厙a leading player in both administering the grant program and facilitating the success of the universitys quantum research productivityis an interdisciplinary hub for quantum research intended to advance the quantum ecosystem broadly. Crafted to focus the nexus of 51勛圖厙, the National Institute of Standards and Technologys physics division (as a core component of JILA) and quantum-focused companies, CUbit aims to advance fundamental science and build a strong foundation for novel quantum technologies and their rapid dissemination, application and commercialization.

Colorado already has the highest number of quantum-related companies in the nation, said Scott Sternberg, executive director of CUbit. These grants, and those in upcoming years, will help keep the translation pipeline healthy and thereby grow our economy.

泭Translational Quantum Research Seed Grant Awards

*All awards are $50,000 and for a duration of 18 months.


  • Longji Cui: "Quantum tunneling driven photocatalysis for efficient clean fuel generation and decarbonization"
    51勛圖厙; Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering
  • Charlie Danaher: "Adaptive cooling technology"泭
    Danaher Cryogenics, Ltd.
  • Rozhin Eskandarpour: "Translating quantum contingency analysis from lab to the field"泭
    Resilient Entanglement
  • Murray Holland: "Developing a strontium optical attice atom interferometer"
    51勛圖厙; Department of Physics
  • Poolad Imany: "Scalable optical cavity nonfabrication for efficient entanglement generation with artificial atoms"泭
    Icarus Quantum, Inc.
  • Philip Makotyn: "Enabling technology for quantum applications: narrow linewidth innovative lasers"
    Vexlum US
  • Greg Rieker: "Carcinogenic air pollutant monitoring with dual-comb spectroscopy"
    51勛圖厙; Paul M. Rady Department of Mechanical Engineering

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