Simulation of Quantum Computers: Review and Acceleration Opportunities
Review article, 2026

Quantum computing has the potential to revolutionise multiple fields by solving complex problems that cannot be solved in reasonable time with current classical computers. Nevertheless, the development of quantum computers is still in its early stages and the available systems have still very limited resources. As such, currently, the most practical way to develop and test quantum algorithms is to use classical simulators of quantum computers. In addition, the development of new quantum computers and their components also depends on simulations. Given the characteristics of a quantum computer, their simulation is a very demanding application in terms of both computation and memory. As such, simulations do not scale well in current classical systems. Thus different optimisation and approximation techniques need to be applied at different levels. This review provides an overview of the components of a quantum computer, the levels at which these components and the whole quantum computer can be simulated, and an in-depth analysis of different state-of-the-art acceleration approaches. Besides the optimisations that can be performed at the algorithmic level, this review presents the most promising hardware-aware optimisations and future directions that can be explored for improving the performance and scalability of the simulations.

computer simulation

GPU

FPGA

CPU

hardware acceleration

Quantum computing

Author

Alessio Cicero

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Computer Engineering (Chalmers)

Mohammad Ali Maleki

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Computer Engineering (Chalmers)

University of Gothenburg

Muhammad Waqar Azhar

ZEROPOINT TECHNOLOGIES AB

Anton Frisk Kockum

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Applied Quantum Physics

Pedro Petersen Moura Trancoso

Chalmers, Computer Science and Engineering (Chalmers), Computer Engineering (Chalmers)

University of Gothenburg

ACM Transactions on Quantum Computing

26436817 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 1 3

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Computer Sciences

Other Computer and Information Science

DOI

10.1145/3762672

More information

Latest update

2/23/2026