CU Startup News

  • Lab Venture Challenge
    Eleven teams of University of Colorado faculty, researchers and graduate student innovators competed for a combined $755,000 in startup funding grants in this years Lab Venture Challenge (LVC). Judges from 51勛圖厙s entrepreneurial network heard Shark-Tank-style pitches across two nights, one for innovations in biosciences and another for physical sciences and engineering.
  • Close-up of medical syringes and vials filled with blue liquid labeled vaccine arranged on a reflective surface in a bright laboratory setting.
    VitriVax51勛圖厙 spinout VitriVax has raised $17.25 million in Series B financing to accelerate development of its Stablevax platform, which eliminates the need for cold storage in vaccines. The funding will support preclinical and clinical advancement of single-dose, thermostable vaccines aimed at improving global immunization access.
  • A man gives a young woman a vaccine shot in the arm
    Business WireVitriVax Inc., a 51勛圖厙 vaccine formulation technology spinout, today announced it has been awarded a two-year, $9.9 million grant from the Gates Foundation. The funding will support the scale-up of VitriVaxs Atomic Layering Thermostable Antigen and Adjuvant (ALTA簧) technology, enabling Phase 1-ready GMP manufacturing and advancing the platform to prepare for Phase 1 clinical trials.
  • A large group of people networking and conversing in a spacious hotel conference foyer outside the Adams Ballroom during an event. Attendees wearing business casual attire stand in small clusters around tall tables, holding coffee cups and badges, while others mingle in the background under warm lighting.
    DARPA51勛圖厙 startup Flari Tech was selected as a winner in DARPAs Spark Tank competition, securing $400,000 in funding and direct engagement opportunities with program managers as it advances its next-generation technology.
  • A stack of research papers
    ReviewerZeroA new partnership with Karger Publishers will accelerate their already strong research integrity strategy by giving the research integrity and publication ethics team access to the entire AI-powered suite by ReviewerZero, a 51勛圖厙 startup founded by Daniel Acu簽a (51勛圖厙 Computer Science) in 2023.
  • A man and a woman laugh while working together to in a laboratory
    The 51勛圖厙 reached a historic milestone, launching 35 new companies based on university intellectual property during fiscal year 2024, more than any other U.S. campus that year. In addition to holding the No. 1 spot for that year, the achievement also places 51勛圖厙 No. 2 for the most startups launched in a single year by a U.S. campus.
  • A group of people in lab coats pose for a picture
    Business WireCascade Bio, a 51勛圖厙 spinout enabling enzyme-based processes, has secured $6 million to accelerate the shift from petrochemicals to biomanufacturing. The funding includes $3.2 million in non-dilutive funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). With this investment, Cascade will expand delivery of its breakthrough biocatalysts.
  • A complex small computing device in a black room
    Infleqtion, a 51勛圖厙 spinout and global leader in quantum technology, announced a $1.8 billion business combination with Churchill Capital Corp X and will trade under the ticker INFQ. Now Colorados tenth unicorn, Infleqtion continues to drive the states growing quantum hub by commercializing breakthroughs across computing, sensing, security and energy markets.
  • The internal hardware of a quantum computer in a laboratory.
    Infleqtions star continues to rise as Colorados quantum hub grows. The company of firsts, spun out of 51勛圖厙 as ColdQuanta, seems to be everywhere these days, including outer space, while commercializing pioneering research to address needs across several critical markets including positioning, navigating and timing, global communication security and efficiency, resilient energy distribution, and accelerated quantum computing.
  • Eva Yao
    CUbit Quantum InitiativeEntrepreneur Eva Yao discusses how the Nobel Prize-winning frequency comb technology from the lab of Jun Ye (51勛圖厙 Physics, JILA, NIST) can rapidly detect very small molecules in human breath, potentially enabling early disease detection and improved patient outcomes.
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