QTREX Engineers Conductivity Itself to Address Quantum Computing’s Cryogenic Heat-Load Barrier
July 01, 2026 -- Nes Ziona, Israel, July 01, 2026 -- QTREX Quantum Ltd.("QTREX" or the "Company"), a company focused on advancing Additively Manufactured Electronics (“AME”) for quantum computing infrastructure today announced the development of a controlled-conductivity cryogenic microwave interconnect architecture designed to reduce heat conduction while preserving microwave signal performance in quantum computing systems. The Company filed a U.S. Provisional Patent Application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) and the underlying technology is patent pending.
The Company’s architecture is based on the intentional use of the Wiedemann–Franz Law, a fundamental law of physics linking electrical conductivity and electronic thermal conductivity in metallic conductors, with particular relevance at cryogenic temperatures. By applying this law at the materials-design level, The Company is turning conductivity into an engineering parameter for cryogenic quantum infrastructure, enabling conductive materials to be designed not only for signal transmission, but also for thermal behavior in ultra-low-temperature environments.
This capability is enabled by QTREX’s control over the full materials-to-component process, from the chemistry and engineering of its manufacturing materials, through the additive manufacturing process, and into the final quantum-infrastructure component. This vertical control allows the Company to design material behavior for the specific requirements of quantum environments.
In superconducting quantum computing systems, microwave control and readout signals must travel from room-temperature electronics to quantum processors operating at millikelvin temperatures inside dilution refrigerators. Each interconnect line can also become a thermal pathway, conducting unwanted heat into the coldest stages of the system. This is already a significant constraint in today’s cryogenic quantum systems and becomes increasingly critical as systems scale.
"Our ability to dictate material properties from the chemical formulation through to the final component gives us a unique competitive advantage in the quantum sector", said Dagi Ben-Noon, CEO of QTREX. "This architecture is a direct result of our vertically integrated approach, demonstrating how our advanced manufacturing capabilities has the potential of solving complex infrastructure challenges that traditional methods simply cannot address."
QTREX has seen strong interest from industry participants exposed to this development, reflecting the fact that this approach introduces a new way of thinking about cryogenic quantum infrastructure. This interest is already moving into near-term technical evaluation, with one of the Company’s current industry collaborators expected to begin reviewing the architecture as early as next week.


