色色啦

News

Quantum computing is forcefully moving from labs to markets

Associate Professor Nina Granqvist leads an Academy of Finland research project that studies the market emergence around quantum computing in real time.
Associate Professor Nina Granqvist. Photo: Aalto University / Jaakko Kahilaniemi
Associate Professor Nina Granqvist. Photo: Aalto University / Jaakko Kahilaniemi

Nina Granqvist, What do you find as the most interesting aspects in your study?

Quantum computing is still in a very early stage with scientists in universities and companies solving bottlenecks in technology and searching for most suited application areas. The devices today underperform classical computers in almost every aspect 鈥 but have a major future potential.

By making use of quantum-mechanical phenomena quantum computing promises 鈥渄ouble-exponential鈥 speed-ups in information processing. This will enable solving complex problems that are impossible to address with current supercomputers. For example, quantum computers may revolutionize drug discovery by enabling the simulation of large molecules, and allow breakthroughs in artificial intelligence and machine learning. Quantum computing also poses substantial threats as it will eventually enable breaking the current encryption systems.

For these reasons we have seen a bit of a geopolitical armaments race of public investments. Also, all major technology companies invest in this area, and there are dozens of hardware and software start-ups. The market development is in a very early phase, however, and it is unclear which technologies win and what kinds of applications there might be, and when. For someone interested in the emergence of markets, this is a fascinating setting.

When can we expect some results from your study?

We already have some early publications out, for example, looking into how consultants create markets for knowledge around quantum computing, and how scientists make quantum computing understandable for publics.

The analysis of our main data will take time, and several publications are currently under development. Those studies explore the development of business models in start-ups, roadmaps and timing of investments, as well as new forms of collaborations. We publish continuously from the project in the coming years.

Something else?

Finland is the key country in the European ecosystem, and the science originating from Aalto is at the core of the development of quantum computing. For example, Bluefors produces the cryogenic units for the global players, and IQM is a leading European hardware manufacturer.

A continuation of the project is currently on the final round of evaluation for the Consolidator Grant of the European Research Council. Getting that funding is a bit of 鈥渁 holy grail鈥 and would allow my team to continue this line of research long into future. Thumbs up!

The International Day of Women and Girls in Science is celebrated on 11 February!

School of Business

We strive for better business and better society. We excel in education and research with a multidisciplinary approach and in collaboration with our partners.

Read more
School of Business students. Photo: Ari Toivonen
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Filmbot robot
Research & Art Published:

Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible

FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Research often involves choosing a single analytic path, but there are other options available, Picture: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto University.
Press releases Published:

Scientific conclusions depend on who performs the analysis

More than 450 independent researchers from around the world conducted over 500 re-analyses of datasets from one hundred previously published studies in the social and behavioural sciences. All analysts received the same data and the same central research question, but they were free to carry out the analysis based on their own expert judgment.
Group of students at round tables talking and working on laptops in a bright office space
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Positive communication and improvisation help build students鈥 communication skills to meet employer needs

The School of Business redesigned its mandatory first-year communication course
Avner Peled's doctoral thesis presented in the Aalto ARTS 2025 annual review
Research & Art Published:

Learning Environments Research Group 鈥 2025 in Review

2025 recap: three doctoral theses on context-aware interaction design, AI as creative learning partner, and telerobotic puppetry for peacebuilding.