Nanyang Technological University — Quantum groups — academia dossier

Nanyang Technological University — Quantum groups

Quantum computersQuantum sensing active
Institution
Nanyang Technological University (NTU)
Lab / Centre
School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences · Nanyang Quantum Hub (NQH) · Quantum Science and Engineering Centre (QSec)
Also
Joint programmes with CQT (NUS) and A*STAR via the National Quantum Office
Location
Singapore

NTU's quantum-information research is consolidated under the Nanyang Quantum Hub at the School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences and the newer Quantum Science and Engineering Centre, complementing the larger CQT programme at NUS down the road. The hub spans nine faculty across quantum computing theory, ultracold-atom platforms, superconducting devices, and quantum sensing, with notable activity in quantum-thermodynamic foundations (Gu), Rydberg / ultracold-gas simulators (Wilkowski, Dumke), and atom-nanophotonics. A smaller programme than CQT but a distinct research signal in foundations and sensing.

Current focus: Applied quantum technologies and engineered quantum systems — Per NQH's own framing (ntu.edu.sg/nqh): a collaborative research platform focusing on quantum technologies, organised across two areas — applied quantum technologies (quantum computing, sensors, communication, algorithms) and engineered quantum systems (quantum photonics, many-body systems, solid-state materials, cold atoms, superconducting resonators).

Milestones

  1. 2024-12 NTU programme on light-based quantum technologies announced press
  2. 2022-05 NTU launches Quantum Science and Engineering Centre (QSec) for chip-scale quantum technologies press

People

  • Mile Gu — Professor — quantum computing, quantum thermodynamics, complexity (NQH) (since 2016)
  • Rainer Dumke — Associate Professor — superconducting and ultracold-atom quantum devices (since 2011)
  • David Wilkowski — Associate Professor — quantum simulators, ultracold gas, atom-nanophotonics (since 2009)
  • Lock Yue Chew — Associate Professor — quantum chaos, many-body entanglement, quantum thermodynamics (since 2005)
  • Teck Seng Koh — Senior Lecturer — quantum computing, quantum devices, nanoscale physics (since 2015)

Funding

References