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

A collage of nine people in formal and casual attire. Backgrounds vary from office settings to plain walls.
Research & Art Published:

Research Council of Finland establishes a Center of Excellence in Quantum Materials

The Centre, called QMAT, creates new materials to power the quantum technology of coming decades.
Split image: left shows a white truck on a road with plants; right shows digital lines and a partial face. Text: unite! #UniteSeedFund
Awards and Recognition, Cooperation Published:

Two Unite! Seed Fund projects involving Aalto secure top EU funding

Two prestigious EU grants have been awarded to projects that were initially supported with Unite! Seed Funding. Both projects involve Aalto.
arotor adjustable stiffness test setup
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Major funding powers development of next-generation machine technology aimed at productivity leap in export sectors

The BEST research project is developing new types of sealing, bearing, and damping technology.
TAIMI-hanke rakentaa tasa-arvoista työelämää. Kuva: Kauppakorkeakoulu Hanken.
Research & Art Published:

The TAIMI project builds an equal working life – a six-year consortium project seeks solutions to recruitment and skill challenges

Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing skill requirements, the population is aging, and the labor shortage is deepening. Meanwhile, the potential of international experts often remains unused in Finland. These challenges in working life are addressed by the six-year TAIMI project funded by the Strategic Research Council, and implemented by a broad consortium.