Insider Brief
- Phasecraft has received a roughly $4.5 million ARPA-E award to develop quantum algorithms for catalyst discovery under the U.S. Department of Energy’s Quantum Computing for Computational Chemistry (QC3) program.
- The project will focus on identifying catalyst materials that reduce reliance on critical minerals such as iridium, initially targeting hydrogen production applications.
- Phasecraft will collaborate with Johnson Matthey, Harvard University, and QuEra to develop hardware-adaptive quantum algorithms for chemistry and materials science challenges.
PRESS RELEASE — Phasecraft, the world’s leading quantum algorithms company, today announced it has secured an award with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) to begin work under the Quantum Computing for Computational Chemistry (QC3) program. QC3 aims to accelerate energy innovation by supporting the development and application of quantum computing approaches to chemistry and materials science problems that lie beyond the reach of classical computers.
The Collaboration
Under the ~4.5M USD contract, Phasecraft will develop highly optimised quantum algorithms to simulate and discover novel catalysts for use in the energy sector. The project will aim to reduce the current reliance on critical minerals, in particular platinum group metals like iridium, that are used in catalysis. The initial focus is low-cost hydrogen production, with insights expected to apply across syngas production, petroleum refining, metallurgy, and other industrial sectors whose economics depend on the chemistry of catalysts. To complete this project, Phasecraft will partner with Johnson Matthey, Harvard, and QuEra.
The approach builds on Phasecraft’s published work in quantum materials simulation, where the company’s algorithms have achieved efficiency improvements of up to 43,000,000× over previous quantum methods.
“Quantum computing is no longer a distant promise. It’s a working technology, and the question now is which problems it gets pointed at first,” said Ashley Montanaro, Co-Founder and CEO of Phasecraft. “As industry and governments work together to realize the full promise of quantum computing, we are grateful that ARPA-E has chosen Phasecraft to help solve this critical set of problems on a meaningful timescale.”
“Hardware-adaptive quantum algorithms hold immense promise for priority problem sets across the U.S. government broadly, and the Department of Energy specifically,” said Steve Flammia, Principal Quantum Scientist and head of Phasecraft US. “Cutting the iridium requirement in industrial electrolysis would meaningfully change the economics of hydrogen fuel and a wider class of catalytic processes that underpin energy security. Delivering significant quantum speed ups with hardware-adaptive algorithms could help shape iridium requirements in a matter of years, not decades.”
Why Now
QC3 is part of a broader U.S. government effort to convert quantum computing’s technical promise into competitive advantage in energy, the economy, and national security. The areas the program targets — superconducting transmission lines, advanced batteries, rare-earth-free magnets, and new catalysts for fuel production — sit at the foundations of a more secure and affordable American energy system.
Algorithms designed to generate useful results from the imperfect quantum hardware available today, rather than from a future generation of machines, are central to delivering on that timeline. Phasecraft has a demonstrated track record of building ultra-efficient, hardware-adaptive algorithms that make practical quantum applications viable in the near-term and provide massive speed ups over the classical state of the art.



