
China has unveiled the Hanyuan-2, the world’s first dual-core quantum computer with 200 qubits, consuming less than 7 kW of power. Built by CAS Cold Atom Technology in Wuhan, it uses neutral atom arrays instead of superconducting or ion-trap systems, making it far more energy-efficient and easier to operate.
Developed by CAS Cold Atom Technology, a company linked to the Chinese Academy of Sciences and headquartered in Wuhan, Hanyuan-2 is built around neutral atom technology, which is considered more energy efficient and easier to operate and maintain.
Key Highlights of Hanyuan-2
- Architecture: Dual-core design with 200 qubits (100 rubidium-85 atoms + 100 rubidium-87 atoms).
- Breakthrough: First-ever shift from single-core to dual-core quantum processors.
- Energy Efficiency: Operates below 7 kW, compared to competitors requiring massive cooling near absolute zero.
- Cooling System: Uses a small laser cooling setup, avoiding complex cryogenic infrastructure.
- Deployment: Cabinet-style design allows installation in ordinary indoor conditions.
- Applications: Parallel computing for faster workloads, error correction, and industrial use cases.
Why Neutral Atom Technology Matters
- Neutral atoms (uncharged particles) reduce interference and improve scalability.
- Advantages over superconducting/ion-trap systems:
- No ultra-low temperature requirement.
- Lower operational complexity and cost.
- Longer qubit coherence times and stability.
Comparison with Global Quantum Systems
| Feature | Hanyuan-2 (China) | IBM Quantum (US) | IonQ (US) | Google Sycamore (US) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Qubit Count | 200 (dual-core) | 127 (superconducting) | ~35 (ion-trap) | 53 (superconducting) |
| Cooling Needs | Small laser cooling | Cryogenic (near absolute zero) | Cryogenic | Cryogenic |
| Power Consumption | <7 kW | Much higher | High | High |
| Architecture | Dual-core neutral atom | Single-core superconducting | Ion-trap | Superconducting |
| Focus | Industrial deployment | Research + cloud | Commercial cloud | Research milestone |
Strategic Implications
- China’s leap: Positions itself as a leader in practical, energy-efficient quantum computing.
- Industrial readiness: Compact design makes it suitable for industrial applications in AI, pharma, and defense.
- Global race: While Western systems chase higher qubit counts, China focuses on stability and efficiency at mid-scale.
Challenges & Risks
- Scalability: Managing millions of qubits remains unsolved globally.
- Competition: Superconducting and photonic systems may leap ahead if they solve scaling faster.
- Commercialization: Neutral atom systems must prove reliability in real-world industrial deployments.












IndianWeb2.com is an independent digital media platform for business, entrepreneurship, science, technology, startups, gadgets and climate change news & reviews.