OtaNano has been irreplaceable for founding many high-tech companies like IQM and Dispelix, who could utilize the infrastructure instead of taking on expensive investments of their own. Bluefors, the global leader in cryotechnology, had its inception in OtaNano. OtaNano’s ease of use has been a contributing factor the entire time.
’OtaNano is unique in lots of ways. OtaNano’s Micronova is the largest cleanroom for research purposes in the Nordics. It’s very rare for a research organisation and a university to operate a large cleanroom infrastructure together,’ says Jyrki Kiihamäki, Co-Creation Manager at VTT.
The new funding will help OtaNano make future strides.
‘In the coming years, OtaNano will be developed further by acquiring new equipment. This year, VTT's long-prepared transition to a 200mm wafer size will be realized. This will enable compatibility with modern equipment and international partners,’ Kiihamäki says.
The Roadmap is part of the Research Council’s long-term plan for research infrastructures, reaching all the way to the year 2030. The plan secures the position of top-quality research infrastructures as the foundation of Finnish research, development and innovation activies.
OtaNano, owned by Aalto and VTT, consists of three main facilities: the Low-Temperature Laboratory, which focuses on ultra-low quantum research, the Nanomicroscopy Center housing imaging and characterization equipment and Micronova, a hub for fabricating semiconductor-based silicone chip components in the nano and micro scales.