Cisco has moved one of the most critical blocks toward a practical quantum network as the company recently unveiled the Cisco Universal Quantum Switch. It is said to be a research-prototype switch that for the first time can route quantum information between devices built by different vendors and using different encoding schemes, all while preserving the fragile quantum state.

Where classical networks rely on routers and switches to interconnect heterogeneous devices, today’s quantum computers remain largely siloed, because each vendor formats quantum information (qubits) in its own “language” of polarization, time-bin, frequency-bin, or path-encoded photons.
The Cisco Universal Quantum Switch changes that model by acting as a cross-modal translator at the hardware level.
How the Universal Quantum Switch Works
At its core, the switch uses a Cisco-patented state-conversion engine built on silicon-based photonics.
When a quantum signal enters the switch, the device converts the qubit encoding into a common internal format for routing, holds it in a coherent state, and then re-encodes it at the output into the format required by the receiving system without measuring or collapsing the quantum information.
In proof-of-concept experiments, Cisco reports less than 4% degradation in quantum state fidelity and entanglement, a level of preservation that keeps the encoded quantum properties usable for tasks such as quantum key distribution, distributed quantum computing, and entanglement?based protocols.
The switch also operates at speeds compatible with emerging quantum networks: Cisco’s team achieved sub-nanosecond electro-optic switching, with connections reconfigurable in as little as one nanosecond, while keeping power consumption below 1 milliwatt per switching element.
Designed for Today’s Fiber, Tomorrow’s Quantum Internet
A particularly pragmatic part of Cisco’s design is that the Universal Quantum Switch runs at room temperature over existing telecom-grade fiber infrastructure.
Unlike many quantum hardware platforms that require cryogenic cooling, the switch uses telecom-compatible photonics and standard optical components, meaning it can plug into deployed fiber plants rather than demanding a green-field installation.
The system supports major quantum optical encoding modalities, including polarization, time-bin, frequency-bin, and path-based encoding, and is designed to interoperate with a growing ecosystem of quantum hardware.
Cisco has already begun collaborating with companies and research groups such as IBM, Qunnect, and Atom Computing, indicating an intent to treat the switch as a foundational element in a multi-vendor quantum network stack.
More Than a Switch: A Full?Stack Quantum Networking Vision
Cisco positions the Universal Quantum Switch as one pillar of a broader end-to-end quantum-networking portfolio developed under its Outshift and quantum-research labs.
That stack now includes:
- A quantum-network entanglement chip that generates entangled photons for long-distance quantum communication.
- A network-aware quantum compiler, which maps algorithms across multiple quantum processors and optimizes execution paths based on latency, fidelity, and available entanglement.
Together, these elements begin to mirror the layered architecture of classical IP networks where routing, forwarding, and protocol orchestration combine to make scalable internetworking possible.
Vijoy Pandey, SVP and GM of Cisco’s Emerging Technologies and Incubation Group, has framed the switch as a stepping stone: connecting quantum systems is the key to scalability, and the Universal Quantum Switch is Cisco’s first major hardware building block in that direction.
Implications Across Three Main Domains
From a practical standpoint, a universal quantum-compatible switch has implications across three main domains:
- Quantum-enhanced communications: Homogeneous switching and routing enable more robust quantum-key distribution (QKD) and eventually entanglement-based secure channels woven into backbone networks.
- Distributed quantum computing: Multiple quantum processors can be linked over fiber and orchestrated by the network-aware compiler, shifting the model from isolated quantum machines to cloud-like quantum computing clusters.
- Hybrid classical-quantum infrastructure: Enterprises and governments can overlay quantum traffic onto existing fiber plants, reducing deployment risk and capital expenditure for early-stage quantum-network pilots.




