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Gari_305 OP t1_j21ehoa wrote

From the Article

>TECHNOLOGIES ENABLED BY quantum science will help researchers better understand the natural world and harness quantum phenomena to benefit society. They will transform health care, transportation, and communications, and enhance resilience to cyber threats and climate catastrophes. For example, quantum magnetic field sensors will enable functional brain imaging; quantum optical communications will permit encrypted communications; and quantum computers will facilitate the discovery of next-generation materials for photovoltaics and medicines.

Also from the article

>2023 will see more innovation in the design of materials for quantum technologies. Of the many awesome candidates considered so far (e.g., diamonds with nitrogen vacancy defects, van der Waals/2D materials, and high-temperature superconductors), I’m most excited about the use of molecular materials. These materials are designed around carbon-based organic semiconductors, which are an established class of materials for the scalable manufacture of consumer electronics (having revolutionized the multibillion-dollar OLED display industry). We can use chemistry to control their optical and electronic properties, and the infrastructure surrounding their development relies on established expertise.

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take_five t1_j23tvqp wrote

Computers bring in new materials. New materials bring in computers.

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Penguings t1_j23qk5b wrote

Title should be, “Quantum computers bring in next generation of new materials”

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kushal1509 t1_j254n8j wrote

Nope, the title is correct. Read the full article.

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FuturologyBot t1_j21izsp wrote

The following submission statement was provided by /u/Gari_305:


From the Article

>TECHNOLOGIES ENABLED BY quantum science will help researchers better understand the natural world and harness quantum phenomena to benefit society. They will transform health care, transportation, and communications, and enhance resilience to cyber threats and climate catastrophes. For example, quantum magnetic field sensors will enable functional brain imaging; quantum optical communications will permit encrypted communications; and quantum computers will facilitate the discovery of next-generation materials for photovoltaics and medicines.

Also from the article

>2023 will see more innovation in the design of materials for quantum technologies. Of the many awesome candidates considered so far (e.g., diamonds with nitrogen vacancy defects, van der Waals/2D materials, and high-temperature superconductors), I’m most excited about the use of molecular materials. These materials are designed around carbon-based organic semiconductors, which are an established class of materials for the scalable manufacture of consumer electronics (having revolutionized the multibillion-dollar OLED display industry). We can use chemistry to control their optical and electronic properties, and the infrastructure surrounding their development relies on established expertise.


Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/zxohwl/new_materials_will_bring_the_next_generation_of/j21ehoa/

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Substantial-Shape948 t1_j25rdi0 wrote

Which companies are in the top line when it comes to Quantum Computers? 🤔

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