Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Grant to fund quantum center

UAPB to get bulk of $5M, collaborat­e with UA, UALR

- RYAN ANDERSON

A new grant from the National Science Foundation is helping the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff set up a first-of-its-kind quantum center in the region and establish a Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g program in the state.

“This is a big [deal] for Arkansas, especially Central Arkansas, and for [us]” as a historical­ly Black college and university, said Mansour Mortazavi, UAPB vice chancellor for Research, Innovation, and Economic Developmen­t. This “is a unique opportunit­y for the state, and we need manpower trained in Arkansas” to work on the technology of the future.

UAPB is one of only three historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es awarded the 2022 National Science Foundation Expanding Capacity in Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g program grant. The five-year, $5 million grant supports the advancemen­t of quantum informatio­n into a new generation of computers, detectors, and materials, as well as establishi­ng the first graduate program in the physical sciences at UAPB, according to UAPB. The university is collaborat­ing with the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock to establish the Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g program.

“We have such good research collaborat­ion, [and] I have a very positive outlook for Arkansas,” said Mortazavi, a professor of Quantum Optics at UAPB. UALR and UA-Fayettevil­le students will “come to our campus, our students will go there — all working on the same projects — [and] we can move forward” together.

“This is an especially impressive and ambitious project made possible only through the collaborat­ive expertise that the UA System can provide,” said UA System President Donald Bobbitt. “I particular­ly want to thank Professor Mortazavi for his efforts in leading the project, and the teams at UA-Little Rock and UA-Fayettevil­le for selflessly assisting [him] in securing this grant.”

Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g is “an area that will enable our students to obtain the advanced study and experience needed for the jobs of the future,” UAPB Chancellor Laurence Alexander said in a news release from the university. “This is a major grant from [the National Science Foundation] and a great opportunit­y for us to work with our university system partners to expand our STEM program offerings.”

The quantum center in Pine Bluff will be an integrated research and education program in quantum materials and devices for integrated quantum photonics, which uses photonic — the physical science of light waves — integrated circuits to control photonic quantum states (a quantum state is a mathematic­al entity that provides a probabilit­y distributi­on for the outcomes of each possible measuremen­t on a system) for applicatio­ns in quantum technologi­es, according to UAPB.

Quantum technology is an emerging field of physics and engineerin­g, encompassi­ng

technologi­es that rely on the properties of quantum mechanics.

Quantum physics and informatio­n “is a really new thing, and there are so many uses and benefits,” Mortazavi said. For example, “we can make computers so fast — amazingly fast — [and] I see quantum optics as the future.”

“There are many, many problems that are so complex that we can make that statement that, actually, classical computers will never be able to solve that problem, not now, not 100 years from now, not 1,000 years from now,” IBM Director of Research Dario Gil explained in a “60 Minutes” story aired earlier this month on CBS. “You actually require a different way to represent informatio­n and process informatio­n. That’s what quantum gives you.”

As the lead institutio­n on this grant, UAPB will receive $3.5 million, which will enable UAPB to provide quantum laboratory and course content for bachelor’s and master’s degree students, support Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g faculty at UAPB, reorient several nanomateri­als experts at UALR and UAPB toward quantum applicatio­ns, and create a hands-on quantum laboratory course for students, according to UAPB.

In addition, UAPB will lead education and outreach activities in hopes of building Quantum Informatio­n Science and Engineerin­g student pipelines and promoting engagement of quantum careers with students from kindergart­en through high school.

“We’re going to start from a younger level,” not wait until students reach college to introduce these concepts, so they are prepared “mentally,” lest they be “left behind,” Mortazavi said. “Quantum shouldn’t be intimidati­ng.”

Too many students lack expertise in — or even exposure to — high-level math and physics prior to college but, through outreach and education like summer camps, their minds can be “developed,” he said. There’s “so much need for that.”

The grant’s remaining $1.5 million will be split evenly between UALR and UA-Fayettevil­le, according to UAPB.

The QuAPB team includes: Qinglong Jiang and Daoyuan Wang, assistant professors in the Department of Chemistry and Physics at UAPB; Grant Wangila, UAPB professor in the Department of Chemistry and Physics and interim dean of the School of Arts and Sciences; Shui-Qing (Fisher) Yu, professor of Electrical Engineerin­g at UA-Fayettevil­le; Hugh Churchill, UA-Fayettevil­le associate professor of Physics and associate director of the MonArk NSF Quantum Foundry; Gregory Guisbiers, UALR assistant professor of Physics; and Tansel Karabacak, UALR professor and chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy.

Churchill and Yu will fabricate integrated quantum photonic devices, gather component materials from collaborat­ors throughout the quantum center, and “leverage the heterogene­ous integratio­n capabiliti­es of the MonArk NSF Quantum Foundry to produce complete devices for characteri­zation at UAPB,” according to UAPB. UA-Fayettevil­le researcher­s will also “transfer quantum device characteri­zation expertise to UAPB and provide opportunit­ies for student training in UA-Fayettevil­le labs and facilities.”

“I am excited to be a part of this statewide effort to fabricate unique quantum devices in Fayettevil­le using materials from Little Rock that will be characteri­zed in Pine Bluff, all in the service of educating students and developing advanced technologi­es,” Churchill said in a news release from UAPB. “Success in our research and education efforts will give [the quantum center] the opportunit­y to anchor a piece of the rapidly growing quantum economy in Arkansas.”

If universiti­es “want to improve, they need research, the new stuff,” Mortazavi said. “With research, every day is something new, and we will never be done.”

Guisbiers will lead the efforts at UALR to synthesize quantum dots — semiconduc­tor particles instrument­al in nanotechno­logy and materials science — that will be used for the developmen­t of photonic devices (components for creating, manipulati­ng, or detecting light), according to UAPB. Karabacak and Guisbiers will develop quantum materials research in Central Arkansas and “use two novel techniques — Pulsed Laser Ablation in Liquids and Hot Water Treatment — to design free and attached quantum dots, respective­ly.”

This isn’t the only significan­t research grant received recently by UAPB, either. UAPB is one of nine consortia partnershi­ps that the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administra­tion’s Minority Serving Institutio­ns Partnershi­p Programs awarded grants totaling $40.9 million.

Mortazavi represents UAPB as one of three universiti­es in the consortium on Sensing Energy-efficient Electronic­s and Photonics with 2D Materials and Integrated Systems for Training the Next-Generation the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administra­tion’s STEM Workforce. UAPB researcher­s join the University of North Texas College of Engineerin­g and the University of Texas at Arlington in partnershi­p with Sandia National Laboratori­es and Argonne National Laboratory to further the science and applicatio­ns of emerging semiconduc­ting materials toward electronic, photonic, and sensing technologi­es, according to UAPB. Sensing Energy-efficient Electronic­s and Photonics will receive $1 million annually for five years.

Too many Arkansas youth “think all the discoverie­s need to be done by MIT or Harvard, or done by other people, but this is for us, right here in Arkansas,” Mortazavi said. “You don’t have to look to other people or universiti­es, [because] we are in the position to do it here.”

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