DARPA Launches HARQ for Heterogeneous Quantum Computing
Summary
DARPA announced the launch of the Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program on April 14, 2026, an effort to overcome barriers in quantum computing by moving beyond single-technology qubit systems to achieve scalable, practical applications. Nineteen performer teams from 15 organizations will work on two parallel workstreams over 24 months: MOSAIC (software frameworks and circuit compilers) and QSB (hardware interconnects for qubit communication). The program aims to establish heterogeneous quantum computing architectures that combine different qubit types.
“HARQ is asking the community to shift away from a 'one-qubit-to-rule-them-all' mindset.”
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DARPA has launched the Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program to address the fundamental limitation of single-qubit technology in quantum computing. The program brings together 19 performer teams from 15 organizations working across two workstreams: MOSAIC (software optimization) and QSB (hardware interconnects). Over the next 24 months, performers will collaborate through technical interchange and co-design efforts to develop architectural principles, tools, and components for heterogeneous quantum systems.
For quantum developers and researchers, HARQ represents a shift in system design philosophy away from a single-qubit approach toward integrated heterogeneous architectures. For prospective users across industry, government, and national security, the program signals a pathway from current experimentation toward operational quantum computing capability.
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For quantum computing, different qubits are better together
HARQ sets out to connect diverse qubits for scalable quantum systems
Notional rendering of heterogeneous quantum architecture. | Download Source: DARPA | Colie Wertz
April 14, 2026
DARPA has launched the Heterogeneous Architectures for Quantum (HARQ) program, an effort aimed at overcoming one of the most persistent barriers in quantum computing: how to move beyond single-technology systems to achieve and scale practical, high-impact applications.
Despite rapid progress across the quantum ecosystem, most current approaches are built around a single type of quantum bit (qubit), which is the basic unit of quantum information. This constraint forces researchers to design entire systems around the limitations of one technology. The resulting homogeneous model stands in stark contrast to classical computing, which derives its power from heterogeneity through the integration of specialized processors such as CPUs, GPUs, and ASICs, each optimized for specific tasks. HARQ is challenging the quantum community to take a similar approach.
At its core, HARQ seeks to establish a new paradigm: heterogeneous quantum computing architectures that combine different qubit types, each selected for what it does best, into a single system.
“Qubit technologies each have their own distinct advantages, but no single approach can deliver everything needed for large-scale, high-performance quantum systems. HARQ is asking the community to shift away from a ‘one-qubit-to-rule-them-all’ mindset,” said DARPA Program Manager Justin Cohen. “We aim to define what a truly heterogeneous quantum architecture looks like and to develop the interconnects that make those systems possible. If successful, this approach could provide a far more efficient path to scaling quantum computing and unlock applications that remain out of reach today.”
To realize this vision, 19 performer * teams from 15 organizations will work on one of two parallel workstreams:
- Multi-qubit Optimized Software Architecture through Interconnected Compilation (MOSAIC) is centered around developing software frameworks and circuit compilers that can optimize a quantum algorithms’ performance and resources by using diverse qubit types. As its name suggests, the goal is to create compiled "mosaics" of physical circuits that are significantly more efficient than those produced by single-platform systems.
- Quantum Shared Backbone (QSB) is focused on the hardware challenge of creating high-fidelity interconnects that support communication between different types of qubits. These efforts aim to enable technologies that link disparate qubit platforms within a single system.
From experimentation to application at scale
For quantum developers, HARQ represents a call to rethink system design beyond a single qubit type. For prospective users across industry, government, and national security, it signals a path forward from experimentation to operational capability.
Over the next 24 months, HARQ performers will collaborate through intensive technical interchange and co-design efforts to develop the architectural principles, tools, and components needed for these systems. By demonstrating the feasibility and scalability of a heterogeneous approach, HARQ aims to lay the groundwork for larger-scale demonstrations and future quantum infrastructure investments, and pave the way for a new generation of quantum machines with the power to accelerate discoveries in materials science, chemistry, medicine, and beyond, providing a decisive advantage for national security.
Performer teams
Mosaic
- Infleqtion
- MemQ
- Q-CTRL
- University of Michigan
University of Pennsylvania
QSBAustralian National University
Carnegie Mellon University
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)
Harvard University
IonQ
Stanford University
University of California Berkeley
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
17 of the 19 teams are on contract; two are still in negotiation. DARPA will update this announcement once those agreements are signed.
Media with inquiries should contact DARPA Public Affairs.
Office
Microsystems Technology Office
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| “ | HARQ is asking the community to shift away from a ‘one-qubit-to-rule-them-all’ mindset.
– Justin Cohen, HARQ program manager |
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