Centre for Quantum Technologies
The Centre for Quantum Technologies (CQT) is Singapore’s flagship national research centre in quantum technologies. Supported under Singapore’s National Quantum Strategy, the centre has nodes at partner institutions and coordinates research talent across the country. We bring together physicists, computer scientists and engineers to do basic research on quantum physics and to build devices based on quantum phenomena. Experts in this new discipline of quantum technologies are applying their discoveries in computing, communications, and sensing.
CQT PhD Programme
High-speed SNSPDs for qubit rate scaling in quantum networks
An optical ground station in Singapore for satellite-to-ground quantum communication (SOGS)
Quantum information processing based on bosonic modes
From BB84 to CT23: A brief history of QKD methodology
Integrable Models in Condensed Matter Physics
Absolutely Maximally Entangled States
How to use quantum computers for biomolecular free energies
Sum-of-squares spectrum amplification and applications
Classical and Quantum Cryptography
Entanglement and Nonlocality
Superconducting Qubits and Quantum Computing
From Light to Optical Qubits
The Schrödinger Equation
Quantum Key Distribution over deployed fiber with room-temperature telecom-band single photon source
Quantum Sensor Networks
Tokenizing the language of complexity in science
Electrons, Atoms & Molecules: A Peek into Quantum Chemistry
Hybrid photonic quantum computing with semiconductor quantum dots
Applications of Quantum Mechanics: Quantum Chemistry
Qubits - An Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
Everything you always wanted to know about atom tunneling &photon propagation but were afraid to ask
Curiosity & Schrödinger's Cat: How Philosophy Intersects with Quantum Physics
Applications of Quantum Technologies
The physics and biophysics of molecular motor dynein and role of thermal fluctuations
Counting excitations! Efficiently reconstructing states in quantum harmonic oscillators
Generalized Quantum Stein's Lemma and Second Law of Quantum Resource Theories
Identifying Old Ice and Water with Single-Atom Counting
Semiconductor Physics and Devices across Length Scales for Quantum and Energy Applications