Be at the heart of actionFly remote-controlled drones into enemy territory to gather vital information.

Apply Now

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Metric Geo
Manchester
3 days ago
Create job alert

Senior Technical Leader – CMOS Quantum IC Development


Location: United Kingdom

Company: Leading European Quantum Computing Start up

The ideal candidate will be responsible for leading the design and development of CMOS-based integrated circuits and device layers for next-generation quantum computing systems. They will oversee a team of IC designers, contribute hands-on to circuit and device development, and help shape the quantum layer of the company’s hardware platform. The role combines technical leadership with strategic team building and mentorship, including contributing to PhD and research management programs.


Responsibilities

  • Lead the development of CMOS die and integrated circuits for quantum computing applications
  • Manage and mentor a team of ~10 engineers, balancing hands-on technical work with leadership responsibilities
  • Design, implement, and evaluate electrical components and circuits for quantum hardware
  • Oversee ID development and technical project milestones, ensuring high-quality deliverables
  • Contribute to teaching and PhD supervision programs
  • Ensure operational excellence by maintaining testing methods, equipment, and quality assurance processes
  • Collaborate with cross-functional teams to drive forward the quantum computing layer of the platform


Qualifications

  • PhD or Master’s degree in Electrical Engineering, Physics, or related field
  • Proven experience in IC design and CMOS technology, with a hands-on understanding of device-layer development
  • Strong technical leadership and team management experience
  • Experience with quantum hardware, cryogenic systems, or advanced semiconductor devices is highly desirable
  • Strong problem-solving, analytical, and mathematical skills
  • Excellent written and verbal communication, with ability to mentor and guide researchers


This position offers the opportunity to lead a pioneering quantum hardware effort in Europe, combining technical depth with strategic team development in a fast-moving, innovative environment.


If this sounds like you... apply today!

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Quantum Integrated Circuit Engineer

Senior Quantum Design Engineer

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

Quantum Computing Recruitment Trends 2025 (UK): What Job Seekers Need To Know About Today’s Hiring Process

Summary: UK quantum computing hiring has shifted from credential‑first screening to capability‑driven evaluation. Employers now value provable contributions across the stack—algorithms & applications, compilation & optimisation, circuit synthesis, control & calibration, hardware characterisation, error mitigation/correction (QEM/QEC), verification/benchmarking, and hybrid HPC/quantum workflows—plus the ability to communicate trade‑offs, costs and feasibility to non‑quantum teams. This guide explains what’s changed, what to expect in interviews and how to prepare—especially for quantum algorithm engineers, quantum software/compilers, experimentalists, quantum control & firmware, cryo/readout engineers, quantum error correction researchers, verification/benchmarking specialists, and quantum‑adjacent product managers. Who this is for: Quantum algorithm/applications engineers, compiler/optimisation engineers, control/firmware engineers, experimental physicists & hardware engineers (superconducting, trapped ion, photonic, spin/neutral atom), cryogenics & RF/microwave, QEC researchers, verification/benchmarking specialists, quantum‑HPC orchestration engineers, and product/BD roles in the UK quantum ecosystem.

Why Quantum Computing Careers in the UK Are Becoming More Multidisciplinary

Quantum computing has long been considered an elite subfield of physics and computer science. But as quantum technologies advance—from fault-tolerant hardware to quantum algorithms and quantum cryptography—they’re moving closer to real applications in finance, materials simulation, optimisation, cryptography and more. As this transition happens, UK quantum computing careers are becoming increasingly multidisciplinary. Quantum systems are no longer just the domain of physicists and quantum software engineers. If quantum technologies are to be trusted, adopted and regulated, professionals must also incorporate expertise in law, ethics, psychology, linguistics & design. In practice, quantum computing projects now intersect with data governance, risk, human interaction, explainability and communication. In this article, we’ll explore why quantum computing careers in the UK are shifting to multidisciplinary roles, how these five supporting fields intersect with quantum work, and what job-seekers & employers should do to keep up in this evolving frontier.

Quantum Computing Team Structures Explained: Who Does What in a Modern Quantum Department

Quantum computing has shifted from lab curiosity to the next frontier of high-impact computing. Across the UK, universities, national labs, start-ups, and established tech and finance firms are building quantum teams to explore algorithms, design hardware, and deliver quantum-ready software. As momentum grows, so does the need for clear, robust team structures. Because quantum R&D spans physics, engineering, computer science, and product, ambiguity about who does what can slow progress, increase risk, and inflate costs. This guide maps the typical roles in a modern quantum computing department, how they collaborate across the research-to-product lifecycle, skills and backgrounds UK employers expect, indicative salary ranges, common pitfalls, and practical ways to structure teams that move fast without breaking science.