Consortium

 

Single Quantum makes the world’s fastest and most sensitive light sensors limited only by the laws of physics, with a technology based on superconducting nanowire single photon detector (SNSPD).

 

 

The background of the University of Oxford’s Advanced Nanoscale Engineering Lab is in the application of phase-change materials in a variety of optoelectronic devices, as well as advanced nanofabrication techniques.

 

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The Photonics Research Group in Ghent University is part of the University's Centre for Bio- and Nano-Photonics and affiliated with IMEC. It specialises in silicon photonics for applications in telecommunications, datacommunication, sensing, medical devices and advanced computing.

The Nanostructred Materials and Interfaces Group investigates the relationships between functional properties of materials and their structres at the nanoscale, with a focus on nanoscale surface interactions for novel NEMS/MEMS and phase change memory applications.

 

TU Delft's Optics Research Group specialises in developing disruptive improvements to existing optic technologies with an emphasis on applications such as new opto-electronic devices and materials, and computational optics with the potential to influence artificial intelligence.

 

The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye (TÜBİTAK) is the leading agency for management, funding and conduct of research in the country, focusing on development in a variety of fields, including materials for the improvement of memory devices and developing artifical intellience solutions needed by industry. 

 

Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft is an applied research organisation with a focus on a variety of fields including artifical intelligence development - specifically in the realms of neural network compression machine learning and communication, with an emphasis on how these innovations can be used for a positive impact in business and industry.