planqc manufactures quantum computers using trapped neutral atoms as qubits, controlled by precision laser pulses. The stack reveals a hardware-centric org: CAD tools (Zemax, SolidWorks), FPGA design (Xilinx, Verilog, SystemVerilog, VHDL), embedded Linux (PetaLinux, Yocto), and compute kernels (CUDA, MPI). Pain points cluster around hardware-software integration and scaling the control system software — a predictable friction point when bridging photonics engineering with quantum algorithms. Hiring is engineering-heavy (12 of 14 roles) and accelerating, with mid-to-senior skew, suggesting they're moving past proof-of-concept into manufacturing and deployment phases.
planqc designs and builds quantum computers based on neutral-atom technology, founded in 2022 and based in Munich. The company emerged from Munich's quantum research ecosystem and combines atomic-clock precision, quantum gas microscopy, and Rydberg-gate control to scale toward thousand-qubit systems. Active projects include a 1,000-qubit system for the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre and bespoke machines for the German Aerospace Center, alongside Horizon Europe research partnerships. The business model mixes custom hardware delivery with quantum algorithms and cloud access (QCaaS). Operations span 51–200 employees across engineering and operations, with headquarters in Munich.
FPGA design (Xilinx, Verilog, SystemVerilog, VHDL), embedded Linux (PetaLinux, Yocto), Python, C++, Rust, gRPC, CUDA, and hardware simulation (cocotb). CAD tooling includes Zemax and SolidWorks for photonics and mechanical design.
A 1,000-qubit system for the Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, a bespoke machine for the German Aerospace Center, and research prototypes for Horizon Europe partnerships. All use neutral-atom arrays controlled by laser pulses.
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