07/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/07/2026 13:06
The U.S. National Science Foundation today announced Project Triad, a first-of-its-kind initiative to integrate quantum sensing, quantum networking and quantum computing into a single operational system. By bringing these three capabilities together for the first time, Project Triad will move quantum technology out of the lab and into real-world use - with applications spanning safety, healthcare, energy, manufacturing and more.
The initiative will lay the scientific and technological foundation needed to refine, scale and commercialize these systems through U.S. industry, strengthening American economic competitiveness, national security and quality of life.
"NSF Project Triad will unite the research enterprise to advance the administration's vision, ensuring public investments translate into strategic advantages in quantum technology for all Americans," said Brian Stone, performing the duties of the NSF director. "Project Triad, in alignment with the executive order 'Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation,' continues NSF's leading role in advancing innovation that improves American prosperity, quality of life, national security and creates jobs for American workers."
Quantum technologies make use of quantum properties (such as entanglement and superposition) found in particles of matter and energy, like atoms and photons. This allows quantum sensors to detect finer details and quantum computers to potentially solve problems that would otherwise take years, or even centuries, to tackle.
Combining quantum sensors, networks and computers in integrated quantum systems opens a new frontier of possibilities:
"Achieving Project Triad will require exceptional fundamental scientific work alongside translational research to utilize quantum data to its utmost," says NSF Chief Science Officer Simon Malcomber.
Quantum technology is advancing fast globally, and the U.S. needs to move quickly, but also smartly. Project Triad takes a systematic approach to identifying which quantum breakthroughs are ready to scale, cutting the ones that aren't, and accelerating the most promising ideas from lab to market. It does this through three interlocking programs that bring together government, universities and private industry - making it the first effort to build a fully integrated quantum environment in the United States.
Project Triad draws on NSF's existing portfolio of quantum research programs - including its network of specialized institutes, engineering centers and national research infrastructure - giving Triad access to the latest findings and discoveries for real-world testing within the integrated quantum system. These programs also train the next generation of quantum scientists and engineers, ensuring the workforce is ready to build on what Project Triad delivers.