Existing quantum computers have a real problem: they tend to become incoherent when noise is added. That is, when the temperature of the wrong part rises for any reason. Wouldn't it be great if there were a different way to maintain pairing between particles besides very low temperatures?
At sufficiently high pressure any material* will exhibit electron pairing. The other word for that is "superconductor". I read about an experiment wherein a 3000 nanometer piece of osmium was compressed at a more than high enough pressure to create pairing. It seems likely that a lithographed circuit made of carbon on an osmium backplane would have this characteristic, if put under sufficient pressure.Now 3000 nanometers isn't a lot, but at contemporary feature sizes it can make about a 200 by 200 transistor processor. Such a processor could merge traditional processing at superconductive speeds with quantum magic, making a hybrid processor far more powerful than existing quantum computers.
*that has electrons-- Voice, May 29 2021 Cooper pairing works with electrons and, theoretically, with other fermions. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooper_pair [Voice, May 29 2021] Computing with pressure https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MONIAC [hippo, May 29 2021] //tend to become incoherent// hey I resemble that-- pocmloc, May 29 2021 Muh-muh-my t-t-tee-th-h-h-h ch-ch-ch-at-t-t-er a b-b- b-bit at the wr-wrong t-t-tem-pera-ture too.-- RayfordSteele, May 29 2021 [bigsleep] see the link about electron pairing. It's not molecular bonding, and not directly related to the traditionally known states of matter.-- Voice, May 29 2021 Yay! (+) Learning.-- 2 fries shy of a happy meal, May 30 2021 ^ today's session has been brought to you by the words under and with and the prefix nano.-- wjt, Jun 05 2021 random, halfbakery