Green Tech
China-based Green Tech is a Supercapacitors developer, established in 2002. The company produces a wide range of supercapacitors, from single-cell units to large systems.
China-based Green Tech is a Supercapacitors developer, established in 2002. The company produces a wide range of supercapacitors, from single-cell units to large systems.
US-based GRIP Molecular Technologies develops in-house diagnostic test that is based on a single-use bio-sensor. The sensor contains CVD graphene.
GRIP Molecular raised $3 million in 2021 and is on track for a commercial launch in 2025.
Hangzhou Gaoxi Technology (GaoxiTech) was founded in 2016 with an R&D center that covers an area of 10,000 square meters. GaoxiTech is focused on R&D, technical support and production of monolayer graphene and its macro-assembly materials.
GaoxiTech has developed and patented technologies for graphene oxide, multifunctional graphene composite fiber, graphene electrothermal film and graphene thermo-conductive film. GaoxiTech has obtained product certification of monolayer graphene and monolayer graphene modified functional textiles from the International Graphene Product Certificate Center.
China-based Hefei Haizhou New Material, also known as SuperC, develops and manufactures nano-materials. The Company develops Few Layer Graphene materials (FLG), enabling the production of lithium ion batteries, fireproof coatings, anticorrosive coatings, electrical and thermal conductivity materials, and graphene composite materials.
UK-based HexagonFab develops biological sensors based on graphene. The company is a spin-off from the University of Cambridge.
HexagonFab offers sensors including handheld readout devices to analyze protein concentrations and interactions. The company says its graphene-based sensor offer highly sensitive results in an affordable and portable device.
HyCarb is a Florida-based early-stage company, headquartered at the University of Central Florida Business Incubator in Research Park. HyCarb uses graphene and carbon nanotubes to develop enhanced, environmentally-friendly batteries, super-capacitors, fuel cells, solar panels, sensors, catalysts, filters and transistors.
HyCarb has an exclusive license for three patents from the University of Central Florida (UCF) that utilize graphene aerogels and conducting polymers. HyCarb is currently focused on creating five new anodes and five new cathodes to be fabricated into prototype batteries that store renewable energy.
Iceni Labs is a spin-out from Imperial College London, developing a graphene-based microphone. The new graphene microphones will provide higher audio quality than existing technologies as the potential of graphene as a microphone diaphragm is well known, as the stresses and strains across the membrane are more uniform than in a silicon device.