PhotonDelta Opens Office in Silicon Valley to Power Next Wave of Semicon Tech in North America
San Francisco, 9 July 2024 -- Dutch photonic chip accelerator PhotonDelta has announced the opening of a new office in North America. The move is part of the organisation’s goal to grow the photonic chip industry by promoting collaboration between European and North American organisations, both leaders in this emerging key enabling technology.
Photonic chips enable the creation of advanced semiconductors leading to smaller, faster, and more energy-efficient devices. Crucially, they can overcome the limitations of traditional semicon technology, a fundamental requirement to accelerate innovation for the continued development of AI in a sustainable manner.
Besides the usage of PIC technology in datacentres for enhanced performance and reduced energy consumption, integrated photonics also holds enormous opportunities for quantum computing and sensing solutions for new applications in healthcare, agriculture, and automotive. To drive this innovation, PhotonDelta secured $1.2 billion to run numerous R&D programmes, lead international roadmapping activities and invest in pioneering startups that apply PIC technology.
Over the last five years, the Dutch photonic chip industry has raised over $500 million for companies such as SMART Photonics, EFFECT Photonics, PHIX Photonics Assembly, Astrapé Networks, MantiSpectra, Surfix Diagnostics, Delta Life Science, Scantinel Photonics, Amazec, and many more.
The Netherlands is home to the largest concentration of photonic chip technology organisations in the world. It is also one of the global leaders in the development of Indium Phosphide and Silicon Nitride-based photonic chips. The USA is paving the way in Silicon Photonics as it benefits from its extensive infrastructure and greater scale of production due to its compatibility with traditional semiconductor manufacturing.
Silicon Photonics needs Indium Phosphide to function, as one cannot integrate active components on Silicon. Silicon Nitride, in turn, is particularly useful for sensing applications and quantum computers, as it benefits from extreme low-loss characteristics. In short, depending on the application, a combination of different platforms is needed to unlock the optimal functionalities and characteristics.
Based in Silicon Valley, PhotonDelta’s new hub will bring the Netherlands’ world-class photonic chip capabilities to North American organisations. The PhotonDelta ecosystem currently covers over 70 different organisations that form a complete value chain, including design services, multiple foundries for photonic chip fabrication, packaging, assembly and testing, and an increasing number of fabless companies that use PIC technology for innovative solutions.