Deep Dive Series
How to Build a Quantum Computer
You can now build a working quantum computer from commercially available vendor components. In March 2026, the Q-PAC consortium in Denver went from concept to cloud-accessible operation in five months, using a QuantWare QPU, Qblox control electronics, a Maybell cryostat, and Q-CTRL calibration software, all assembled by an independent integration team. Similar multi-vendor builds are running at QuTech in Delft and IQM at LRZ in Munich. QuantWare’s $178 million Series B and the construction of KiloFab, a dedicated quantum fabrication facility, confirm that modular quantum computing is no longer an experiment. But the engineering to make it work is anything but simple.
This Deep Dive series is the practical companion to my coverage of quantum computing supply chains and Quantum Open Architecture. Where the supply chain series maps who makes the components and the QOA series explains why modular architecture matters, this series covers what happens when you actually try to integrate them: the facility preparation that most data centers cannot accommodate, the signal chain engineering that determines whether your qubits perform to spec, and the calibration sequences that separate a working machine from an expensive refrigerator full of noise. Each major qubit modality gets a dedicated build guide (superconducting, trapped-ion, neutral-atom, photonic, and silicon-spin), and cross-cutting articles cover the cryogenic infrastructure and helium-3 supply chain, the HPC integration and software stack, and the economics of building and operating at every scale.
The analysis in this series draws on Applied Quantum’s Systems Integration Playbook, the most detailed technical reference for assembling quantum computers from modular components, supplemented by published deployment data from Q-PAC, the IQM/LRZ integration (arXiv:2509.12949), and the QuTech HectoQubit/2 project. For the physics of how each qubit modality works, see the Quantum Computing Modalities Deep Dive.
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Building Quantum Computers
Building a Superconducting Quantum Computer
The complete integration guide for assembling a superconducting quantum computer from modular components. Signal chain engineering, cryostat selection, calibration sequences, and the operational reality of keeping transmon qubits running at 10 millikelvin.
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Building Quantum Computers
Preparing a Facility for a Quantum Computer
A superconducting quantum computer is not a server rack. This guide covers the facility requirements that most data centers cannot accommodate, from vibration isolation to helium-3 storage, with a reference floor plan.
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Building Quantum Computers
Building a Trapped-Ion Quantum Computer
Trapped-ion quantum computers trade the cryogenic infrastructure of superconducting systems for a different set of challenges: precision laser systems, ultra-high vacuum, and the QCCD architecture that shuttles ions between functional zones.
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Building Quantum Computers
Building a Neutral-Atom Quantum Computer
No dilution refrigerator. No helium-3. No chilled-water plant. Neutral-atom quantum computers run at room temperature in standard server racks, and Pasqal has deployed them into production HPC centers across three continents.
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Building Quantum Computers
Building a Photonic Quantum Computer
Photonic quantum computing encodes information in particles of light on silicon chips fabricated at semiconductor foundries. The core processor runs at room temperature. The supply chain is vertically integrated. Here is what that means for builders.
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Building Quantum Computers
Building a Silicon-Spin Quantum Computer
Silicon-spin qubits are manufactured on the same 300 mm semiconductor lines that produce classical processors. They operate at 1 K instead of 10 millikelvin. They eliminate helium-3. The supply chain is young but the thesis is compelling.
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Building Quantum Computers
The Cryogenic Infrastructure That Makes (or Breaks) a Quantum Computer
The dilution refrigerator is the most expensive, longest-lead, and physically largest component in a superconducting quantum computer. The helium-3 it runs on comes from nuclear weapons stockpile decay. Both define the scaling ceiling.
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Building Quantum Computers
Integrating a Quantum Computer into HPC Infrastructure
A quantum computer without HPC integration is an isolated experiment. NVQLink, QRMI, and CUDA-Q make QPUs schedulable alongside GPUs in standard Slurm environments. Here is how the integration works and where the software stack falls short.
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Building Quantum Computers
What a Quantum Computer Actually Costs to Build and Operate
A 5-qubit research system costs roughly $2 million over five years. A 20-qubit mid-range system costs $10 million. An industrial installation runs $30-150 million. Here is where the money goes, who pays, and what surprises first-time buyers.
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