Paris-based Alice&Bob, a company on a mission to build a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer to help industries and researchers solve problems, announced that it has raised €27M in its Series A round of funding. The investment was led by Elaia (an existing investor), Bpifrance, through its Digital Venture fund, and Supernova Invest. Existing investor Breega also participated in this round.
Sofia Dahoune, Investment Director at Elaia, says, “As deep tech investors, we are convinced that some of society’s biggest challenges can be addressed by using breakthrough technologies created in research labs. As such, we regard quantum computing as one of the most promising world-changing technologies that could foster extraordinary progress across a broad range of applications.”
“Building powerful quantum computers”
According to Alice&Bob, Qubits are the fundamental building blocks of quantum computing, in the same way that bits are the foundation of classical computing. One of the biggest challenges in building a fault-tolerant quantum computer is the errors affecting qubits, which can be of two types: bit-flips and phase-flips.
Technology giants, including Google, Amazon and IBM, international academia and laboratories around the world are racing to build a fault-tolerant quantum computer. Researchers are pursuing one of five hardware approaches – neutral atom, spin, photons, trapped ions and superconducting qubits. Many of these approaches rely on a quantitative approach for reducing bit-flip and phase-flip errors, which would require tens of thousands of physical qubits to produce a quantum computer. The largest group of physical qubits that researchers have been able to produce so far is 127.