D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) has successfully demonstrated scalable on-chip cryogenic control for gate-model qubits, representing a significant technical expansion of its hardware portfolio. The successful validation of this technology confirms that the multiplexed control architecture originally developed for D-Wave’s commercial annealing systems is transferable to a universal gate-model framework. By integrating control logic directly onto the quantum processor, D-Wave aims to mitigate the “wiring bottleneck”—the requirement for high-density, individual control lines routed from room temperature into the dilution refrigerator—which currently limits the scalability of superconducting quantum computers.

The demonstration utilized a specialized multichip package integrating a high-coherence fluxonium qubit chip with a multilayer control chip via superconducting bump bonding. Unlike the hardware-heavy control schemes used by many superconducting competitors, D-Wave’s architecture leverages multiplexed digital-to-analog converters to manage thousands of qubits with a limited number of bias wires. This approach—developed in collaboration with the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)—allows for high-density interconnects that maintain superconductivity and qubit fidelity while significantly reducing the thermal load and physical footprint within the dilution refrigerator.

Strategically, this milestone positions D-Wave as the only commercial entity currently developing both annealing and gate-model superconducting hardware on a shared technological stack. By utilizing its established micro-circuit manufacturing and advanced cryogenic packaging supply chains, the company seeks to accelerate the timeline for a commercially viable gate-model system. D-Wave asserts that its superconducting platform offers faster gate execution times than trapped-ion or neutral-atom modalities, a distinction the company believes will be decisive as the industry moves toward fault-tolerant, large-scale quantum processing units (QPUs).

Read the official press release here.

January 6, 2026