ÄûÃʵ¼º½

News

Canatu Oy, a spin-off from Aalto University, was granted €22 million in funding

Canatu Oy manufactures flexible and formable carbon nanomaterial films and touch sensors targeted for touch displays.

Canatu is an exemplary success story in the field of nanotechnology, says Professor Esko Kauppinen. Photo: Kira Leskinen.

Canatu Oy, founded in 2008 by Professor Esko Kauppinen and his research colleagues, has received €22 million in late stage investment. The amount consists of investments made by different parties totalling €10 million and a loan of €12 million granted by the European Investment Bank, and is one of the largest amounts of funding that Finnish start-up companies have ever been granted.

Canatu Oy manufactures flexible and formable carbon nanomaterial film for touch screens and sensors. The product is based on a hybrid carbon nanomaterial, named Carbon NanoBud®, which Kauppinen and his research group invented in 2006.

‘I have had the great pleasure to see the company evolve from a research lab to entering the market. Canatu Oy is a success story in the field of nanotechnology,’ Kauppinen says delighted.

Until now, the carbon nanomaterial film has been manufactured for an important customer in the car industry. Encouraged by excellent experiences, the company now intends to expand its production to innovative consumer electronics and the needs of other businesses in the car industry. Canatu Oy will invest this funding in R&D and expanding its production, and there are also plans to build a new, bigger factory. The company’s headquarters and production facilities are in Helsinki. Canatu Oy currently employs 40 people, but intends to double this number in near future.

For more information, please contact:
Kirsten Fay, Marketing Manager
Tel. +358 44 281 6108
kirsten.fay@canatu.com

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Research & Art Published:

The PDF files in the Aalto research portal are not loading

The PDF files in the ACRIS research information system’s research portal (research.aalto.fi) are currently not loading. The issue is being investigated.
Three people talk at a round table; woman holds a cup, phone nearby, tech wall behind
Research & Art Published:

How to attract employees back to the office

Return-to-office policies are popular among employers, but securing employee cooperation hinges on offering them a fair exchange in return for accepting less autonomy.
A dog and two researchers. Photo: Aalto University/Mikko Raskinen
Research & Art Published:

Assistance dogs interpret needs of the person they assist non-verbally

A recent study shows that assistance dogs not only help people with practical tasks, but also actively contribute to their care
From left: Prof. Stefan Weinzierl (TU Berlin), Prof. Johannes M. Arend (Aalto University), and Prof. Christoph Pörschmann (TH Köln) after the Lothar-Cremer Award ceremony at DAGA 2026 in Dresden, Germany.
Awards and Recognition, Research & Art Published:

Professor Johannes M. Arend from Acoustics Lab receives Lothar-Cremer Award

Professor Johannes M. Arend was honoured for his innovative and groundbreaking work in the fields of binaural technology and virtual acoustics