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

Apply Now

Senior Electronics Engineer - Oxford

Oxford Ionics
Oxford
2 months ago
Create job alert

The future is quantum. Oxford Ionics is at the forefront of pioneering quantum computing, delivering world-leading innovation to create the most powerful, accurate, and reliable quantum systems. Quantum computing offers a radically new way of building computers that harnesses the power of quantum physics to outperform conventional supercomputers exponentially. Using our unique trapped-ion technology, we are leading the race to unleash quantum computing's unparalleled potential.

What to expect:

We’re looking for a Senior Electronics Engineer to become the founding member of our new Electronics Engineering function and help us build the world’s most powerful quantum computers. In this role, you will take ownership of mixed signal PCB development for our quantum systems, encompassing low-noise analogue paths and high-speed digital subsystems (including FPGAs, DACs, and DDS). You will also establish the processes and tools for the Electronics Engineering function, grow the team in Oxford and collaborate closely with the wider organisation.

The quantum core of our hardware is built from trapped-ion qubits, controlled by devices designed and fabricated by a partner tier-one fab. We manipulate the ions using electrical signals and laser light driven by real-time FPGA systems and networked equipment. Quantum states are read out using precisely tuned lasers and CMOS sensors, with the entire hardware system orchestrated by Xilinx FPGAs and SoCs. The Electronics Engineering team is responsible both for understanding and enhancing our existing lab-grade electrical systems and for architecting, designing and producing data centre quality systems for the future.

This is a lab centric role, combining hands-on technical work with team-building. You will be the engineer who gets our systems performing at their best today and the mentor who grows tomorrow’s electronics team by designing, validating and delivering production-grade units.

What you'll be responsible for:

You will lead the design and delivery of electronic systems that power our quantum computers. You will oversee the full lifecycle of PCB and module development, from requirements through to production and establish the processes, standards and technical direction for our new Electronics Engineering function.

You’ll be hands-on in designing low-noise analogue circuits, RF circuits up to 1GHz, power distribution networks, FPGA systems and mixed-signal modules. Your role will also involve collaborating closely with software and FPGA teams to ensure seamless integration across the wider system architecture.

Key responsibilities include:

  • Leading PCB and electronic module design, including requirements capture, schematic design, simulation, bring-up, verification, and release to production.
  • Building and maintaining the component library, BoMs, and design standards for the team.
  • Owning relationships with manufacturing partners, agreeing design rules and stack-ups, handling queries, and signing off first-article inspections.
  • Developing automated test fixtures and calibration routines to improve first-pass yield and supporting EMC and safety compliance documentation.

You will also take ownership of validation, ensuring the quality and reliability of electronics deployed in our quantum computers. This includes managing earth-leakage and ground loops in complex multi-rack systems and working directly with colleagues to integrate and optimise systems in the lab.

Finally, as the founding member of the Electronics Engineering team, you’ll recruit, coach and lead engineers, run design reviews and set the technical direction to build a scalable, high-quality function that supports our mission to deliver the world’s most powerful quantum computers.

Requirements

You will bring a strong track record in multi-layer PCB design within industrial environments, demonstrating confidence in delivering complex mixed-signal designs from concept through to production. You will have significant experience with analogue and digital circuit design, as well as system-level architecture for electronic systems. Your communication skills, technical writing, and ability to plan work packages and engage senior stakeholders will be essential.

Key skills and experience:

  • Extensive multi-layer PCB design experience, ideally using Altium.
  • Proven ability to deliver complex PCB and integrated projects in industry.
  • Strong analytical, testing, and debugging skills, with confidence using lab equipment such as oscilloscopes, VNAs, spectrum analysers and logic analysers.
  • Significant experience in design for test and engineering best practices.
  • Demonstrated planning, mentoring, and cross-functional collaboration capabilities.
  • BEng or MEng in Electrical or Electronic Engineering (or similar) with 10+ years’ experience in mixed-signal PCB design.

Your technical expertise should cover analogue circuit design (active and passive filters, low-noise DAC circuits, crosstalk mitigation, power supplies), RF circuits (modulation, filtering, impedance matching <1GHz), digital circuit design (FPGA systems, high-speed serial links, SPI, I²C, JTAG, clock distribution including DDS devices), and system architecture (collaborating with software/FPGA teams, power supply optimisation and ground loop management).

Benefits

Oxford Ionics is leading the way in quantum technology, and we need skilled, innovative individuals like you. We offer a range of benefits, including opportunities to further your career with a world-class team, business stock options, 30 days paid annual leave (plus bank holidays), flexible working, private medical and dental insurance for you and your family and much more. Join us and be part of the future of quantum computing. 

Oxford Ionics is committed to equal opportunity for all.

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Lead Electronics Engineer - Oxford

Senior Optical Scientist - Oxford

Technical Project Manager - Oxford

Senior Quantum Scientist - Boulder

Senior Packaging Engineer - Oxford

Senior Quantity Surveyor

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 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.

Why the UK Could Be the World’s Next Quantum Computing Jobs Hub

Quantum computing is rapidly emerging from the realm of theoretical physics into practical reality. While classical computers use bits (0 or 1), quantum computers employ qubits, which can exist in superpositions of states. This enables them to tackle certain types of problems—such as optimisation, complex simulations, and cryptography—that classical machines struggle with. Although quantum technology is still in its early stages, sectors including financial services, pharmaceuticals, materials science, and cybersecurity are already experimenting with and investing in quantum computing. As a result, demand for professionals with expertise in quantum algorithms, quantum hardware, software integration, and quantum error correction is growing. The United Kingdom is uniquely positioned to become a global quantum computing jobs hub. With leading universities, expanding research programmes, supportive government strategy, and a maturing quantum ecosystem, the UK is building a foundation for career growth in this transformative field.

The Best Free Tools & Platforms to Practise Quantum Computing Skills in 2025/26

Quantum computing has moved from theory to practice. No longer confined to physics labs, it is now a serious field of research, development, and even early commercial application. From cryptography and drug discovery to optimisation in finance and logistics, quantum computing is shaping up to be one of the most transformative technologies of the coming decades. For job seekers in the UK, this is a once-in-a-generation opportunity. Roles in quantum computing are appearing not only in big tech but also in finance, aerospace, pharmaceuticals, and government research. Employers want candidates who don’t just understand the theory, but who can actually design, test, and deploy quantum algorithms. The challenge? Quantum hardware is still rare, expensive, and limited. But the good news is that there are many free tools, platforms, and resources you can use to practise quantum computing skills today — building your knowledge, portfolio, and career prospects without spending a penny. This article explores the best free platforms for learning and practising quantum computing, how to use them effectively, and how to build portfolio projects that stand out to UK employers.