Quantum Research Sciences, in partnership with Purdue’s Rosen Center, is building a no-hallucination AI platform to help the U.S. Air Force rapidly filter and assess thousands of vendor proposals, ushering in a new era of efficient, AI-driven defense modernization.

Quantum Research Sciences has collaborated with the Rosen Center for Advanced Computing at Purdue University to create ACID-R. The platform utilizes artificial intelligence to assist warfighters at the Department of Defense in navigating commercial contracting, including technologies used on the F-22 Raptor. Image Credit: ranchorunner / Shutterstock
Quantum Research Sciences (QRS), a leading Indiana-based software company, has been awarded a U.S. Air Force contract to develop an artificial intelligence-driven platform called ACID-R, or Automated Commercial Industry Data-Repository.
The platform is designed to help the Air Force efficiently identify and leverage the technologies it needs from the private sector. It harnesses AI without the risk of hallucination or AI-generated false information to quickly deliver details on commercial and military-focused products and services.
Streamlining reviews, improving effectiveness
QRS CEO Ethan Krimins said the Air Force currently receives new technology proposals through antiquated channels, such as email, where relevant information is often buried within PDFs that are up to 20 pages long.
"ACID-R is designed to streamline access to commercial capabilities, accelerating defense modernization with sustainment and logistics," he said.
ACID-R enables vendors to upload their capability statements, and the AI-powered software extracts the relevant information from each proposal.
"The Air Force will then be able to view, search and filter through thousands of proposals rather than manually reviewing each statement," Krimins said. "ACID-R will also automatically inform vendors of missing information that the Air Force needs, enabling them to create more effective proposals."
QRS and Purdue connections
QRS is a Purdue Innovates client company. It is partnering with Purdue's Rosen Center for Advanced Computing to develop the ACID-R platform. RCAC is a national leader in high-performance computing and AI innovation.
Laura Theademan, director of RCAC Center Operations and Visualization, said, "We have been collaborating with Ethan on federal contracts for nearly a decade. This USAF project is the largest and most significant yet."
Program leader Daniel Madren, the senior research development administrator at RCAC, has been handling the near-daily tech innovation with Air Force counterparts.
"I am thrilled with the progress that our team has made," he said. "This has been a multipronged effort with our AI scientists, research software engineers and visualization experts all working collaboratively alongside QRS to develop this cutting-edge platform."
QRS and the DOD
QRS is also the creator of the Department of Defense's first operational quantum software. It collaborates on quantum computer software with Andreas Jung, a professor of physics and astronomy at Purdue University's College of Science, and the Jung Research Group, where AJ Wildridge conducts his doctoral research.
Krimins said the company brings its deep expertise at the intersection of quantum computing and national security to this effort.
"Our company's mission-driven approach emphasizes thorough discovery and coordinated deployment of software solutions that can solve real-world defense challenges," he said. "With this new initiative, QRS and RCAC will integrate advanced AI techniques to help the Air Force harness the power of private sector innovation."
About Quantum Research Sciences
Quantum Research Sciences (QRS) is an American technology company focused on the discovery, development, and delivery of quantum software. QRS created the DOD's first operational quantum software and is working toward new quantum software applications every day. For more information on QRS, visit https://quantumresearchsciences.com/.