Amazon & De Beers to Power Quantum Networks With Synthetic Diamonds
Diamond-enabled quantum networking through a collaboration between AWS and De Beers subsidiary Element Six could bring enhanced communication and data security in fields such as finance, healthcare, and defense.
April 13, 2023
Amazon Web Services’ Center for Quantum Networking has joined forces with De Beers Group’s Element Six division to develop synthetic diamonds that can act as a node in quantum networks, according to a blog post from AWS and Element Six.
Researchers will use diamond memory nodes to allow quantum communication to travel long distances without breaking down. The subatomic matter of diamonds makes this advance in data delivery possible.
“The collaboration between AWS and Element Six aims to develop a scalable synthetic diamond solution that could be used to advance the development of quantum technologies -- including secure networks, sensors, or computers -- in the future,” says Daniel Twitchen, executive director of business development and technologies sales at Element Six in an interview with Network Computing.
Because natural diamonds lack the purity to scale quantum memories, researchers are developing synthetic diamonds, according to Bart Machielse, senior research scientist at AWS in an interview with Network Computing.
“The same growth techniques that are used for many materials in the semiconductor industry are used to grow these diamonds,” Machielse says. “These diamonds can be made with levels of purity and in shapes that don’t exist in nature – making it a powerful tool for optimizing the diamond host for quantum memories.”
New Techniques for Diamond Development
AWS and Element Six will develop new techniques for developing ultrapure diamonds with the shape, smoothness and crystalline properties that allow them to be converted into devices that host quantum memories, Machielse explains.
Synthetic diamond allows quantum information to be distributed over long distances, he adds. That capability is lacking with classical repeaters in traditional computing.
“Currently there exists no device capable of extending this range, as classical repeaters (the amplifiers used to extend the range of the existing internet) disrupt quantum information as it passes through them,” Machielse says. “We hope to supplement these classical repeaters with quantum repeaters, potentially made out of synthetic diamond,” Machielse says.
Diamonds with atomic defects can help develop next-generation technologies in quantum networking and communications. Specifically, Element Six uses high-purity plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD)-grown diamonds, Twitchen says.