News Release

Quantum visualisation techniques to accelerate the arrival of fault-tolerant quantum computers

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Oxford

Credit: Catherine Dawson, Davis Group.

image: 

Joseph P. Carroll supervising operations at one of Davis Group Andreev scanning tunneling microscope (STM). Credit: Catherine Dawson, Davis Group.

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Credit: Catherine Dawson, Davis Group.

A research study led by Oxford University has developed a powerful new technique for finding the next generation of materials needed for large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing. This could end a decades-long search for inexpensive materials that can host unique quantum particles, ultimately facilitating mass production of quantum computers. The results have been published today (29 May) in the journal Science.

Quantum computers could unlock unprecedented computational power far beyond current supercomputers. However, the performance of quantum computers is currently limited, due to interactions with the environment degrading the quantum properties (known as ‘quantum decoherence’). Physicists have been searching for materials resistant to quantum decoherence for decades, but the search has proved experimentally challenging.

In this new study, researchers from the Davis Group at Oxford University have demonstrated a highly effective new technique to identify such materials, referred to as topological superconductors.

A topological superconductor is an unprecedented form of quantum matter that can host exotic quantum particles referred to as Majorana fermions. In theory, these particles can store information within their shape and structure (topology), instead of how they usually do - within the state of the particle itself. This means that the information is more stable and  unaffected by local perturbations such as disorder and noise. As a consequence, they can store quantum information permanently, without this being degraded by the quantum decoherence effects which limit current quantum computers.

Up to now, there has been no effective technique to determine definitively whether a given superconducting material can be the platform for advanced topological quantum computing. In this new study, the Oxford researchers verified that the known superconductor uranium ditelluride (UTe 2) is an intrinsic topological superconductor.

Since its discovery in 2019, UTe2 had been considered the leading candidate material for intrinsic topological superconductivity. The electron pairs in UTe2 were believed to be highly unusual with their spins aligned, a necessary condition for intrinsic topological superconductivity and thus topologically protected, superconductive surface states. However, no research had definitively demonstrated these phenomena in UTe2 – until now.

The researchers used a scanning tunneling microscope (STM), which uses an atomically sharp superconducting probe to obtain ultra-high-resolution images at the atomic scale, without using light or electron beams. The experiments used an entirely new operating mode invented by Professor Séamus Davis (called the Andreev STM technique).

This method is specifically attuned only to electrons in a special quantum state (topological surface state) that is predicted to cover the surface of intrinsic topological superconductors.

When implemented, the method performed exactly as theory suggested, enabling the researchers to not only detect the topological surface state but also to identify the intrinsic topological superconductivity of the material.

The results indicated that UTe2 is indeed an intrinsic topological superconductor, but not exactly the kind physicists have been searching for. Although, based on the reported phenomena, Majorana quantum particles are believed to exist in this material, they occur in pairs and cannot be separated from each other.

However, the Andreev STM experimental technique used is a breakthrough in itself. This novel technique can now allow physicists to determine accurately and directly whether other materials harbour intrinsic topological superconductivity, so as to provide promising platforms for topological quantum computing.

Intrinsic topological superconducting materials remain a profound challenge to find and are largely a theoretical concept at present, yet the field is advancing rapidly. Researchers worldwide are actively investigating the potential candidates and technology needed to harness their properties. Earlier this year, Microsoft announced the Majorana 1, as “the world’s first Quantum Processing Unit powered by a Topological Core”, supposedly hosting topological qubits. Microsoft achieved this device by creating a synthetic topological superconductor based on elaborately engineered structures made of conventional superconductors.

However, the Davis Group’s new work means that scientists can now identify simple crystalline materials to replace such complicated and extremely expensive artificial circuits, potentially leading to economical topological qubits for the next generation of quantum computing. 

Professor Séamus Davis (Department of Physics, University of Oxford) said: “The invention of the Andreev STM technique, the detection of the superconductive topological surface state, the identification of intrinsic topological superconductivity, and the precise categorization of the latter are all firsts in physics. In combination, these can massively accelerate our ability to identify the right materials to enable the revolution that quantum computing will bring.”

Lead author Dr Shuqiu Wang (then of Davis Group in Oxford but now Assistant Professor at the University of Bristol) said: “It is truly exciting to see the first spectroscopic signature of intrinsic topological superconductivity. This major scientific discovery only becomes possible with our newly invented spectroscopic technique. I look forward to discovering more intrinsic topological superconductors and their fascinating and exotic physics that have yet to be revealed using the Andreev STM technique!"

The study also involved researchers from University of California – Berkeley and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Cornell University, University of Bristol, University of Maryland, Washington University, University College Cork, and University of Notre Dame.

Notes to editors:

For media requests contact: JC Séamus Davis jcseamusdavis@gmail.com

The study ‘Pair wave function symmetry in UTe2 from zero-energy surface-state visualization’, will be published in Science at 19:00 BST / 14:00 ET Thursday 29 May 2025, DOI 10.1126/science.adk7219. Advance copies of the paper may be obtained from the Science press package, SciPak, at https://www.eurekalert.org/press/scipak/ or by contacting scipak@aaas.org

About the University of Oxford

Oxford University has been placed number 1 in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings for the ninth year running, and ​number 3 in the QS World Rankings 2024. At the heart of this success are the twin-pillars of our ground-breaking research and innovation and our distinctive educational offer.

Oxford is world-famous for research and teaching excellence and home to some of the most talented people from across the globe. Our work helps the lives of millions, solving real-world problems through a huge network of partnerships and collaborations. The breadth and interdisciplinary nature of our research alongside our personalised approach to teaching sparks imaginative and inventive insights and solutions.

Through its research commercialisation arm, Oxford University Innovation, Oxford is the highest university patent filer in the UK and is ranked first in the UK for university spinouts, having created more than 300 new companies since 1988. Over a third of these companies have been created in the past five years. The university is a catalyst for prosperity in Oxfordshire and the United Kingdom, contributing £15.7 billion to the UK economy in 2018/19, and supports more than 28,000 full time jobs.


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