Hardware & Instrumentation

  • A man works at a workshop table
    The Grand Junction Daily Sentinel—Brandon Regensburger, founder and CEO of ExoPower, a CU Â鶹ӰԺ startup, is developing a technology that can wirelessly charge robots as they move and work. He has set up shop in the Grand Junction Business Incubator Center, where he continues developing technology he has worked on for years as a graduate student at CU Â鶹ӰԺ and Cornell University.
  • A woman in a lab holds up a beaker with a jelly fish inside it
    FY 2023-24 was another tremendous year for innovation and entrepreneurship at the CU. University researchers, inventors and creators began working with Venture Partners at CU Â鶹ӰԺ to advance 144 breakthrough innovations, and 36 CU startups were launched through Venture Partners based on campus discoveries.
  • Progressive photos of a piece of resin degrading
    Composites World—Mallinda Inc., a CU Â鶹ӰԺ spinout and global developer of vitrimer resin systems, announces the commercial launch of Vitrimax versatile hot melt (VHM) resin, a vitrimer-based composite resin system. According to the company, this technology combines the optimal mechanical properties of thermosets with the processing flexibility of thermoplastics, while enabling economic recyclability and reuse for high-performance composites.
  • A schematic of the deposition process, as thorium ions get vaporized then deposited in a thin film on the substrate's surface
    EurekAlert!—Reported recently in a new study published in Nature, a team of researchers, led by JILA and NIST Fellow and Â鶹ӰԺ Physics professor Jun Ye, in collaboration with Professor Eric Hudson’s team at UCLA’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, have found a way to make nuclear clocks a thousand times less radioactive and more cost-effective, thanks to a method creating thin films of thorium tetrafluoride.
  • Hundreds of colorful lines converging on a single white point.
    Yahoo Finance—Ayar Labs, a semiconductor startup based in San Jose and spun out of CU Â鶹ӰԺ, has raised $155 million in new funding to accelerate the development of its optical I/O technology.
  • Aerial photo of a manufacturing facility
    PR Newswire—Sionic Energy, a CU Â鶹ӰԺ spinout and a recognized leader in electrolyte and silicon battery technology for next-generation lithium-ion batteries, announced that the world's lithium-ion battery producers no longer have to rely on graphite. Designed for seamless integration into existing lithium-ion battery manufacturing processes, Sionic's Silicon Battery Platform maximizes silicon material performance with regard to energy density, extended cycle life, and rapid charge rates.
  • A visual rendering of a optical computer components integrated into a GPU
    The Register—Ayar Labs, a CU Â鶹ӰԺ spinout, contends silicon photonics will be key to scaling beyond the rack and taming the heat of increasing AI model demands. Many photonics startups are looking to overcome the limitations of copper interconnects and improve the efficiency of optical I/O, but Ayar is among the first.
  • Lab Venture Challenge
    Fourteen teams of University of Colorado faculty, researchers and graduate student innovators competed for a combined $1.25 million in startup funding grants in this year’s Lab Venture Challenge (LVC).
  • Daily Camera—Research funding at the Â鶹ӰԺ has more than doubled in the last decade, increasing by about $391 million. There were 35 CU Â鶹ӰԺ-affiliated startup companies this last fiscal year compared to 10 the year before.
  • An illustration of computer circuits.
    Photonics Online—A new variant of liquid crystal is at the core of CU Â鶹ӰԺ startup Polaris Electro-Opstics' technology. Designed as a seamless drop-in enhancer of silicon photonic chips, Polaris's modulator technology paves the way for the next generation of optical interconnects critical to the future of data center disaggregation.
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