74 afleveringen
- I used to think cryogenic cooling was mainly a support layer in quantum. After my interview with Alexander Regnat, I now think it may be one of the strategic bottlenecks.
In this episode, Henny Crauwels asked me what actually changed in my thinking after the Kiutra interview. My honest answer is that I underestimated the cooling layer. For superconducting and spin qubits, cryogenic cooling is not optional. It is what makes the quantum effects usable in the first place. But the more important insight is that cooling is both an enabler and a bottleneck. It enables the qubit, but it can also limit how fast the industry learns, scales, and deploys.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand what really constrains the quantum stack. Three things changed my view. First, testing speed. If cooling, loading, testing, and reloading takes many hours or even a day, the learning cycle slows down. Second, the heat budget. As qubit counts scale, the control lines, wiring, amplifiers, and electronics all compete for tiny millikelvin cooling budgets measured in microwatts. Third, helium-3. Traditional dilution refrigerators depend on a scarce isotope with concentrated supply, which turns cooling into not only an engineering issue but also a supply chain and sovereignty issue.
That is why Kiutra became more interesting to me during the interview. Not just as a cryogenic cooling company, but as a company attacking hidden bottlenecks in the quantum stack: testing speed, heat budget, helium-3 dependency, and modular cooling architecture. The broader investor lesson is simple. Quantum is not only a qubit race. It is also an infrastructure race. And the qubit roadmap only matters if the infrastructure roadmap can keep up.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why cryogenic cooling is more strategic than I first thought
Why testing speed can become a major bottleneck in quantum hardware
Why faster cooling and reloading can accelerate the learning cycle
Why the heat budget becomes critical as systems scale
Why microwatts matter more than most people realize
Why helium-3 creates a supply chain and sovereignty question
Why cooling also matters for other modalities beyond superconducting and spin qubits
Why modular cooling architecture could matter as systems become larger and more deployable
Chapters
00:00 What changed in my thinking after Kiutra
00:35 Why cryogenic cooling is essential
00:59 Why testing speed is a real bottleneck
01:52 Why the heat budget matters so much
03:10 Why cooling also matters beyond superconducting qubits
04:17 Helium-3 scarcity and sovereignty risk
05:17 How Kiutra’s magnetic cooling works
06:43 Why faster testing changes the learning cycle
07:43 Heat budget explained in simple terms
10:43 Where helium-free cooling really starts
Share this episode with someone investing in or building in quantum, and subscribe or follow Beyond the Qubit for more conversations on quantum technology, markets, and investing.
📌 Disclaimer:This post is shared on a personal basis and I do not represent any company. - What if quantum does not scale by building bigger fridges, but by redesigning the cooling architecture itself?
In this episode, I unpack one of my biggest takeaways from Part 2 of my Beyond the Qubit interview with Alexander Regnat, co-founder and CEO of kiutra. Most people still picture quantum computing as a chip inside a giant cryogenic chandelier. The default assumption is simple: if the quantum computer gets bigger, the fridge gets bigger. But that may be the wrong mental model.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand what it will take to move quantum from lab systems to deployable infrastructure. Today, many quantum setups are still highly integrated lab machines, where the cooling system, wiring, electronics, and quantum payload are built into one large cryogenic setup. That works in the lab. But as systems grow, it becomes harder to ship, install, upgrade, and scale. At some point, just building a bigger fridge may stop being the right answer.
That is why kiutra’s roadmap caught my attention. L-Type Rapid addresses today’s testing and qualification bottleneck. But the bigger architectural bet is X-Type. The idea is to separate the cooling infrastructure from the quantum payload, move beyond one monolithic cryostat, and make scaling more modular. Add cooling modules instead of replacing the whole system. Less like bespoke lab equipment. More like infrastructure. That is the bigger investor lesson. The question is not only who can build more qubits. It is also who can build the infrastructure layer that turns qubit roadmaps into deployable systems.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why bigger fridges may be the wrong scaling model for quantum
Why cooling architecture matters as systems become larger and more complex
How kiutra’s X-Type changes the mental model of cryogenic infrastructure
Why separating cooling from the quantum payload could improve deployment and upgrades
Why future systems will need cooling at multiple temperature stages, not only one extreme cold point
How modular cooling could scale from microwatts to hundreds of microwatts and beyond
Why shipping, installation, and integration may become real bottlenecks
Why deployable infrastructure may become just as important as the qubit roadmap itself
Chapters
00:00 Magnetocaloric cooling basics
20:43 Why X-Type is a different architecture
21:20 Why integrated cryostats do not scale well
22:48 Separating cooling from the quantum payload
24:14 Why modular cooling matters
25:20 Zero helium-3 and 20 millikelvin
26:00 Scaling cooling power with modules
42:46 From 1 microwatt to 20 microwatts and beyond
Share this episode with someone investing in or building in quantum, and subscribe or follow Beyond the Qubit for more conversations on quantum technology, markets, and investing.
📌 Disclaimers:This is not investment advice.This post is shared on a personal basis and I do not represent any company. - What if the next bottleneck in quantum is not qubit count, but the speed of learning around the hardware?
In this episode, I unpack one of my biggest takeaways from Part 1 of my Beyond the Qubit interview with Alexander Regnat, co-founder and CEO of kiutra. Most quantum discussions still focus on the visible roadmap: more qubits, higher fidelity, better error correction, logical qubits, and fault tolerance.All of that matters. But scaling quantum hardware also requires something less glamorous and just as important: the ability to test, learn, and iterate quickly.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand what it really takes to move quantum hardware from promising science to scalable engineering. For superconducting and spin-based systems, the cryogenic stack is part of the bottleneck. Chips, resonators, amplifiers, wiring, and materials all need to be tested, qualified, and improved under cryogenic conditions. If every iteration takes a full warm-up, reassembly, pump-down, cool-down, and then a day later you discover a failed wire bond, the learning cycle becomes painfully slow.
That is what makes kiutra interesting. Not just because it cools things down, but because it may compress the quantum learning cycle. For certain R&D, testing, and qualification workflows, kiutra’s magnetocaloric cooling approach can reduce manual interaction to minutes, cool-down to hours, and improve throughput by roughly 3 to 10x depending on the measurement. In deep tech, the fastest learner often wins. The question is not only who has the most impressive qubit roadmap. It is also who can build the fastest learning system around that roadmap.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why testing may become a major quantum bottleneck
Why cryogenic cooling is part of the scaling problem
How helium-3 dependence creates a supply chain risk
What magnetocaloric cooling is and why kiutra uses it
Why faster testing can compress the quantum learning cycle
How throughput and feedback speed affect iteration and yield learning
Why failed wire bonds and slow cool-downs are more costly than they look
Why the fastest learner may gain the biggest advantage in quantum
Chapters
00:00 Why investors should care about kiutra
00:58 The helium-3 problem in quantum cooling
03:05 Magnetocaloric cooling explained
03:38 Alexander Regnat’s background and kiutra’s origin
35:47 Why testing and qualification matter so much
36:41 Why traditional dilution fridges slow the learning cycle
38:41 How kiutra cuts interaction time to minutes
39:42 Why faster feedback changes quantum R&D
45:51 The 3 to 10x throughput advantage
46:25 Why the fastest learning system may win
Share this episode with someone investing in or building in quantum, and subscribe or follow Beyond the Qubit for more conversations on quantum technology, markets, and investing.
📌 Disclaimer:This post is shared on a personal basis and I do not represent any company. - In neutral atoms, scale matters less if you cannot control it.
What matters more in neutral atoms: the size of the array, or the ability to control and read it out as the system scales?
In this episode, I unpack the key learnings from Part 3 of my Beyond the Qubit interview with Matt Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion. I went into the conversation looking mostly at qubit scale. I came out paying much closer attention to control, readout, and sensing. Neutral atoms still have a beautiful scaling story. The qubits are encoded in atoms, the atoms are naturally identical, and they can be trapped in large arrays. But large arrays are no longer the only question.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand what really matters in the neutral atom race. The first wave of attention was about physical scale. The next wave may be about control. If you cannot control the atoms accurately, read them out reliably, and connect that to error correction, then large arrays remain impressive science rather than useful logical systems.
That is why photonics, lasers, vacuum systems, and readout are not side details. They are central to the investment case. And the second thing I underestimated was quantum sensing. After speaking with Matt, I see it less as an adjacent market and more as a real commercial signal. Infleqtion sits at the intersection of both: neutral atom computing and quantum sensing. That makes the company interesting not only from a technical standpoint, but also from a commercialization standpoint.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why control and readout may matter more than array size
Why neutral atoms still have a strong scaling advantage
Why photonics, lasers, and vacuum systems are central to the roadmap
How readout connects physical arrays to logical qubit quality
Why quantum sensing deserves more investor attention
How clocks, RF systems, and inertial sensing could become earlier markets
Why GPS resilience makes sensing more than a niche science story
The two investor questions that matter most for Infleqtion
Chapters
00:00 The two biggest investor takeaways
01:00 Why sensing could become a revenue bridge
02:23 Infleqtion’s ambitious logical qubit roadmap
03:03 Neutral atoms explained simply
05:24 Why control and readout matter more now
05:37 Why sensing changes the business model
06:48 GPS jamming, spoofing, and why sensing matters
10:12 Why photonics and lasers matter for logical qubits
12:43 Integrated photonics and scaling the control stack
16:50 The two questions investors should watch
Share this episode with someone investing in or building in quantum, and subscribe or follow Beyond the Qubit for more conversations on quantum technology, markets, and investing.
📌 Disclaimer: This post is shared on a personal basis and I do not represent any company. - Can neutral atoms turn physical scale into logical qubit quality?
What matters more in neutral atoms: how many atoms you can trap, or whether you can turn them into high-quality logical qubits at acceptable overhead?
In this episode, I continue my deep dive with Matt Kinsella, CEO of Infleqtion, to unpack what I think is the real neutral atom question. Infleqtion has already shown a 1,600 physical qubit array, which is impressive. But physical qubits are not the final scoreboard. Logical qubits are. That is why the real investor question is not just whether neutral atoms can produce large arrays, but whether those arrays can be converted into useful logical qubits efficiently.
This episode is for investors, founders, and anyone trying to understand how neutral atom systems may actually scale. We get into why the bottleneck is not adding more atoms, but scaling the optics, lasers, readout, control software, and error correction around them. That is why photonics, spatial light modulators, photonic integrated circuits, dual-species atoms, and qubit movement are not side details. They are part of the scaling architecture.
That is what makes this conversation so important. Neutral atoms may have a real advantage because the qubits are naturally identical, highly packable, and movable. But that advantage only matters if the platform can cross the line from physical qubit headlines to logical qubit quality.
💡 In this episode, we cover:
Why logical qubits matter more than physical qubit headlines
Infleqtion’s roadmap from 12 logical qubits to 1,000
Why neutral atoms have a natural scaling advantage
Why optics, lasers, and readout become the real bottlenecks
Why spatial light modulators matter for scalable control
How photonic integrated circuits could improve stability and scale
Why cesium and rubidium together could support a dual-species approach
Why movable qubits may matter for error correction and overhead
Chapters
00:00 Why logical qubits are the real metric
03:56 Infleqtion’s logical qubit roadmap
06:51 Why neutral atoms scale differently
10:15 Cesium, rubidium, and the dual-species approach
12:13 Why spatial light modulators matter
15:35 Photonic integrated circuits and better lasers
16:50 Why quality can improve with quantity
17:20 Why movable qubits matter for error correction
23:06 The biggest technical bottlenecks ahead
26:48 What investors should really watch
Share this episode with someone investing in or building in quantum, and subscribe or follow Beyond the Qubit for more conversations on quantum technology, markets, and investing.
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