Harvard University’s Office of Technology
Development (OTD) and SiOnyx, Inc. today announced that SiOnyx has
exclusively licensed Harvard’s portfolio of
black silicon patents.
Black silicon, a novel laser implant technique that radically alters the
photonic properties of semiconductor devices, was discovered by Harvard’s
Eric Mazur, Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics, who
holds a joint appointment in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) and
the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS).
A highly light-absorbent material, black silicon absorbs nearly twice
the visible light of regular silicon and detects infrared light that is
normally invisible to silicon based devices, a capability that allows
for dramatic performance enhancements in applications ranging from
simple light detection to advanced digital imaging and solar energy.
In consideration for licensing the patents, Harvard has received an
equity position in SiOnyx and will receive downstream royalties. SiOnyx
also recently raised $11 million in funding from Harris & Harris,
Polaris Venture Partners and RedShift Ventures.
SiOnyx is producing devices that represent the first and only known, low
cost, highly scalable platform for hyper-spectral imaging. The SiOnyx
implant is compatible with established semiconductor manufacturing
processes and introduces no new material. The company’s
patented process employs femtosecond laser processing of the target
material resulting in an extremely thin (300nm) photoconduction layer
applicable to both biased (detection) and photovoltaic (power
generation) applications.
”Black silicon addresses the fundamental pain
point in all photonics systems, the sensitivity to light,”
said Stephen Saylor, president and CEO of SiOnyx, Inc. “By
demonstrating that the black silicon process cost effectively scales
within the established semiconductor device manufacturing
infrastructure, SiOnyx is poised to transform the $10B+ light detection,
imaging and photovoltaic markets by offering device manufactures a path
to smaller, lighter and more efficient photonic systems.”
“Black silicon is a truly groundbreaking
technology, and one that we are thrilled to have emanate from our lab at
Harvard,” said Mazur. “With
guidance and support from Harvard’s Office of
Technology Development, we’ve been able to
successfully put it on a path to commercialization –
one that I am confident will lead to significant opportunity for the
technology and SiOnyx.”
SiOnyx joins a growing list of Harvard spinouts, including Nano-Terra,
SiEnergy, and Sirtris Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: SIRT). Since 2005, more
than twenty companies have spun out of Harvard, several raising funding
from leading venture capital firms including Alloy Ventures, Fidelity
Biosciences, Flagship Ventures, Khosla Ventures, Kleiner Perkins
Caufield and Byers, Novartis Bioventure Fund, Oxford Bioscience
Partners, Polaris Venture Partners and more.
"The technical advances represented by black silicon and the exciting
steps being taken to develop it for commercial applications serve as
even more evidence of the entrepreneurial energy that continues to gel
and accelerate at Harvard," said Isaac T. Kohlberg, Harvard University's
Senior Associate Provost and Chief Technology Development Officer. “The
story of black silicon and SiOnyx is an excellent example of Harvard's
commitment to transfer promising, early-stage technology out of our
research enterprise so it can be developed and utilized for the good of
society."
About Harvard University’s Office of
Technology Development
The Harvard Office of Technology Development (OTD) is responsible for
all activities pertaining to the evaluation, patenting and licensing of
new inventions and discoveries made at Harvard University and Harvard
Medical School. OTD also serves to further the development of Harvard
technologies through the establishment of sponsored research
collaborations with industry. OTD’s mission
is to promote the public good by fostering innovation and translating
new inventions made at Harvard into useful products available and
beneficial to society.
About SiOnyx
SiOnyx is the leading innovator in shallow junction photonics, a
patented semiconductor process coined “Black
Silicon” by researchers at Harvard University
who first discovered the phenomenon. Black silicon radically transforms
the performance of photonic devices. It provides scientists and
engineers with an innovative platform for advancing a wide array of
technologies from simple light detectors to advanced medical imaging
systems. Additional information about SiOnyx is available at www.sionyx.com.