New Hub focussing on quantum sensing, imaging and timing to be launched as part of £160m investment

QuSIT – a collaboration of expert physicists, engineers and data scientists from the Universities of Birmingham, Glasgow, Bristol, Durham, Heriot-Watt, Imperial, Nottingham, Southampton and Strathclyde, as well as the British Geological Survey and NPL – will formally launch in December 2024, with a focus on overcoming the main research barriers to scale up and manufacture quantum sensing, imaging and timing devices. Examples of this new technology include cameras to detect gas leaks and hidden objects, quantum brain scanners to enhance investigation of brain health disorders and epilepsy, and quantum sensing of gravity and magnetic fields to help increase resilience and capacity of critical infrastructure.

QuSIT will bring together expertise from the UK Quantum Technology Hub in Sensing and Timing, the imaging Hub QuantIC, and the wider academic community. QuSIT will also draw together industry, academia and government to leverage the power of quantum sensing, imaging and timing to help address challenges in healthcare, infrastructure, transportation, and security, enabling a safer, healthier, and more sustainable society.

The Hubs are delivered by the UKRI Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), with a £106 million investment from EPSRC, the UKRI Biotechnology and Biological Research Council, UKRI Medical Research Council, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research. Industry collaboration is a key element to all of the hubs, which leverage significant cash and in-kind contributions from partners worth more than £54 million.

“Technologies harnessing quantum properties will provide unparalleled power and capacity for analysis at a molecular level, with truly revolutionary possibilities across everything from healthcare to infrastructure and computing. The five Quantum Technology Hubs announced today will harness the UK’s expertise to foster innovation, support growth and ensure that we capitalise on the profound opportunities of this transformative technology.”

EPSRC Executive Chair Professor Charlotte Deane

The new Hubs continue the work of the UK National Quantum Technologies Programme. Now in its tenth year, the partnership of more than £1 billion between government, academia and industry, fast-tracks quantum knowledge from laboratory to wider society and economic impact.

They are a key component of the UK National Quantum Strategy, which outlines an investment of £2.5 billion of government funding in quantum R&D in the next ten years.