Riverlane raises $75m to meet growing demand for quantum error correction technology

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Riverlane, a leading developer of quantum error correction technology, has raised $75m in Series C funding as it looks to deliver on its quantum error correction (QEC) roadmap.

Credit: Riverlane

The funding will enable Riverlane to expand operations to meet growing demand for QEC technology, with the goal of achieving one million error-free quantum computer operations by 2026.

The round was led by Planet First Partners, the European growth equity sustainable investment platform, with participation from sustainability venture capital investors ETF Partners and Singapore-based global investor, EDBI. Existing investors Cambridge Innovation Capital (CIC), Amadeus Capital Partners, the UK's National Security Strategic Investment Fund (NSSIF), and HPC leader Altair also participated.

The demand for quantum error correction technology has grown dramatically over the past year, driven by a series of technical breakthroughs, improvements in qubit quality and a global shift towards building error-corrected quantum systems. Consequently, the quantum computing industry is now looking beyond today’s small, error-prone machines to a new generation of ‘fault-tolerant’ quantum computers with integrated QEC technology.

Commenting Riverlane’s Founder & CEO, Steve Brierley, said, “Quantum error correction is the critical enabler for the industry’s next huge wave of progress, from today’s small error-prone machines to large and reliable quantum computers that will start a new age of human progress as significant as the digital revolution. Our partners recognise the value in working with Riverlane to deliver a solution that fits their needs - we are building the right product at the right time to seize this opportunity.”

Riverlane has built the world’s largest dedicated quantum error correction team with close to a hundred interdisciplinary experts working on its core product, Deltaflow . 

Applicable to quantum computers using all major qubit types, Deltaflow comprises proprietary QEC chips, hardware and software technologies working in unison to correct billions of errors per second.

At present, best quantum computers can perform only a few hundred quantum operations before failure. Deltaflow is intended to help this increase to millions and, ultimately, trillions of error-free quantum operations.

Achieving this scale will unlock transformative applications in industries such as pharmaceuticals, chemicals, material science and transportation.

Hermann Hauser, Co-founder and Venture Partner, Amadeus Capital Partners, said, “The creation of a common chip architecture solved the defining technology challenge of a new computing paradigm. Riverlane is doing the same in quantum computing. Its QEC chip and stack technology can accelerate the whole industry.”

The Series C funding will enable Riverlane to deliver its groundbreaking quantum error correction (QEC) roadmap. Published earlier this month, it lays out a development path to one million (Mega) error-free quantum computer operations (QuOps) as early as the end of 2026. The roadmap details a series of product releases, each incorporating significant scientific and technical breakthroughs toward this goal.

The ‘MegaQuOp’ milestone represents an important technological inflection point whereby a quantum computer can run operations that are impossible for a supercomputer to simulate. Reaching this threshold will enable the exploration of new use cases associated with simulating complex chemical processes. The simulation and design of better chemical catalysts could, for example, enable the production of new battery materials for more efficient clean energy storage and new processes for cleaner fertiliser production.

Riverlane partners with leading quantum computing companies and government bodies, including Rigetti Computing, Alice & Bob, QuEra Computing, Infleqtion, Atlantic Quantum and national labs such as Oakridge National Lab in the US and the UK’s National Quantum Computing Centre (NǪCC). With this investment, Riverlane plans to expand its operations to meet growing demand from other hardware companies and governments worldwide.