Danish computing company makes its way to London
Kvantify, a Danish quantum and high-performance computing business, is today announcing its expansion to the UK, and the appointment of its in-house drug-discovery team. Founded in 2022, Kvantify enables institutions to harness the full potential of quantum and high-performance computing to solve businesses’ most difficult computational challenges.
Since 2022 when Kvantify was founded, they have scaled quickly, and have recently appointed four new UK-based team members - each previously at Benevolent AI - to make up their in-house drug discovery team. This news follows Kvantify’s recent prestigious EIC Accelerator Grant win and $5.7M funding round earlier this year.
Kvantify’s team in Denmark is made up of 50+ top-tier experts with backgrounds in physics, mathematics, chemistry, and computer science. The startup works across a variety of industries including transport and logistics, finance, and life sciences, delivering SaaS solutions based on Cloud-native, Quantum & High-Performance Computing.
Kvantify’s UK expansion hones in on the company’s popular drug development offering.
The Kvantify UK team will focus on using physical simulations and machine learning methods to accelerate drug discovery. Up until this point, Kvantify has developed software tools to help organisations’ scientists accelerate their drug development projects.
A limitation for many companies is that they lack the competencies or the bandwidth to use computational tools. With the new UK team, Kvantify can reach a broader set of companies and offer the capability to conduct early drug discovery computationally on behalf of clients.
Kvantify’s new hires include Michael Carter - Head of Drug Discovery, Giulio Mattedi - Cheminformatics Specialist, Daniela Dolciami - Senior Computational Chemist, and Rob Z. - Computational Chemistry Specialist.
Kvantify’s expansion to the UK will go hand-in-hand with Kvantify’s other upcoming projects, including the development of Kvantify’s new FAST-VQE quantum algorithm. This algorithm significantly reduces one of the major bottlenecks in the application of quantum technology to the chemistry and drug-discovery space.
Currently in late-stage testing with their supporting partner AWS (Amazon Web Services), FAST-VQE is a major step towards moving chemical and pharma R&D away from the physical lab and towards computers, and expedites the process of applying quantum computing to the chemistry industry.
Kvantify is also launching a collaboration with King’s College London’s Chemistry Department. Kvantify’s co-founder, Professor Nikolaj Zinner, Head of Strategic Alliances, Nils Berglund, and Head of Drug Discovery, Dr Michael Carter, will take on visiting positions at the department to help them adopt new quantum technologies and identify use cases.
Kvantify will additionally gain access to King’s talent pool and will sponsor a PhD student within the Head of Department, Professor Martin Ulmschneider’s, group to develop novel drug discovery methods suitable for quantum computing.
Hans Henrik Knudsen, co-founder and CEO at Kvantify, said: “We believe that London offers an ideal ecosystem for our software solutions to flourish. The city’s vibrant tech community and access to top talent align perfectly with our growth objectives. We have established ourselves as a serious player on the Danish market, and we are now ready to solidify our position in the European market.”
By Mark Adair – Correspondent, Bdaily
- Add me on LinkedIn and Twitter to keep up to date
- And follow Bdaily on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn
- Submit press releases to editor@bdaily.co.uk for consideration.
Want your business, product or service to be seen regionally and nationally? Bdaily helps you get your story in front of the right audience, every day. Find out how Bdaily can help →
Join more than 55,000 subscribers by signing up to our daily bulletin each morning here.
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular morning London email for free.
Don't get caught out by employment law change
When literacy thrives, our businesses thrive too
Building a more diverse construction sector
The value of using data like a Premier League club
Raising the bar to boost North East growth
Navigating the messy middle of business growth
We must make it easier to hire young people
Why community-based care is key to NHS' future
Culture, confidence and creativity in the North East
Putting in the groundwork to boost skills
£100,000 milestone drives forward STEM work
Restoring confidence for the economic road ahead