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Title
Driving innovation in quantum technologies: QCL’s impact at ECTI 2025
Category
general
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70f42ecd2032466d90a481529023bc6f
Source URL
https://quantum.sydney.edu.au/qcl-showcases-research-leadership-at-ecti-2025/
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https://quantum.sydney.edu.au/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:14:24+00:00
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Driving innovation in quantum technologies: QCL’s impact at ECTI 2025

Source: https://quantum.sydney.edu.au/qcl-showcases-research-leadership-at-ecti-2025/ Parent: https://quantum.sydney.edu.au/

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Driving innovation in quantum technologies: QCL’s impact at ECTI 2025

The Quantum Control Laboratory (QCL) showcased its pioneering research in quantum control and quantum technologies at the 8th European Conference on Trapped Ions (ECTI), held in the Netherlands in September 2025. The conference brought together global experts in trapped-ion physics, quantum simulation, and quantum information science, providing a platform for QCL to showcase its breadth of research.

Two members of QCL were invited to present their research as part of the conference’s main program:

Dr Ting Rei Tan delivers a talk

PhD candidate Julian Jee presents his Hot Topic talk

QCL group photo 1

QCL group photo 2

These talks were complemented by a large number of poster presentations, spanning areas such as tunable light-atom interactions for chemical dynamics, continuous-variable entanglement engineering, and quantum information processing with qudits. This breadth of contributions demonstrates QCL’s ability to tackle fundamental challenges in quantum science while simultaneously developing practical pathways toward next-generation quantum technologies.

Poster Presentations included:

Beyond formal presentations, QCL actively engaged in knowledge exchange with leading institutions. The cohort toured laboratories at VU Amsterdam and the University of Oxford’s Ion Trap Quantum Computing research group, where PhD candidates Julian Jee and Maverick Millican presented their work.

Through rigorous scientific inquiry and cross-institutional research collaboration, the group continues to position itself at the forefront of innovation in trapped-ion systems, driving progress in the field of quantum science in 2026 and beyond.

13 January 2026

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