Physics World 2024年12月23日
Imaging and medical-physics firms bag Institute of Physics business awards 2024
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2024年英国物理学会颁发了商业创新奖,表彰在量子技术、绿色能源、成像和医疗物理领域的创新公司。Geoptic公司因使用宇宙射线μ子射线照相术检测铁路隧道安全而获奖,Silveray公司则因其柔性彩色X射线探测器获得初创奖。Phlux Technology公司凭借其高灵敏度红外光传感器也荣获初创奖。Crainio公司因其非侵入式颅内压测量技术获得医疗技术奖。这些获奖公司展示了物理学在解决现实世界问题中的巨大潜力,并为未来的创新提供了方向。

☢️ Geoptic公司利用宇宙射线μ子射线照相术和断层扫描技术,对大型工程结构进行研究,尤其是在确保英国铁路网络隧道安全方面做出了卓越贡献。该公司通过此技术能够清晰地了解隧道内部的潜在危险,帮助工程师评估结构完整性。

🩻 Silveray公司开发了基于纳米颗粒半导体墨水的柔性彩色X射线探测器,这种探测器可以包裹在管道和其他需要成像的结构上,提供实时的数字X射线图像,大大提高了效率,并有望改变价值50亿美元的X射线探测器市场。

💡 Phlux Technology公司研发的红外光传感器比现有最佳设备灵敏12倍,这使得其在快速、精确的3D成像领域具有巨大潜力。其技术特别适用于激光雷达、激光测距仪、光纤测试仪器以及光通信和量子通信网络,尤其是在激光雷达应用中,可以显著提高图像分辨率。

🧠 Crainio公司利用红外光电容积描记术(PPG)结合机器学习技术,开发出一种非侵入式的颅内压测量方法。该技术通过在前额应用简单的探头即可直接测量颅内压,避免了传统方法中需要在患者头骨上钻孔的风险,为患者提供了更安全、更便捷的监测方式。

In my previous article, I highlighted some of the quantum and green-energy companies that won Business Innovation Awards from the Institute of Physics in 2024. But imaging and medical-physics firms did well too. Having sat on the judging panel for the awards, I saw some fantastic entries – and picking winners wasn’t easy. Let me start, though, with Geoptic, which is one of an elite group of firms to win a second IOP business award, adding a Business Innovation Award to its start-up prize in 2020.

Geoptic is a spin-out from three collaborating groups of physicists at the universities of Durham, Sheffield and St Mary’s Twickenham. The company uses cosmic-ray muon radiography and tomography to study large engineering structures. In particular, it was honoured by the IOP for using the technique to ensure the safety of tunnels on the UK’s railway network.

Many of the railway tunnels in the UK date back to the mid-19th century. To speed up construction, temporary shafts were bored vertically down below the ground, allowing workers to dig at multiple points along the route of the tunnel. When the tunnel was complete, the shafts would be sealed, but their precise number and location is often unclear.

The shafts are a major hazard to the tunnel’s integrity, which is not great for Network Rail – the state-owned body that’s responsible for the UK’s rail infrastructure. Geoptic has, however, been working with Network Rail to provide its engineers with a clear structural view of the dangers that lurk along its route. In my view, it’s a really innovating imaging company, solving challenging real-world problems.

Another winner is Silveray, which was spun off from the University of Surrey. It’s picked up an IOP Business Start-up Award for creating flexible, “colour” X-ray detectors based on proprietary semiconductor materials. Traditional X-ray images are black and white, but what Silveray has done is to develop a nano-particle semiconductor ink that can be coated on to any surface and work at multiple wavelengths.

The X-ray detectors, which are flexible, can simply be wrapped around pipes and other structures that need to be imaged. Traditionally, this has been done using analogue X-ray film that has to be developed in an off-site dark room. That’s costly and time-consuming – especially if images failed to be recorded. Silveray’s detectors instead provide digital X-ray images in real time, making it an exciting and innovative technology that could transform the $5bn X-ray detector market.

Phlux Technology, meanwhile, has won an IOP Business Start-up Award for developing patented semiconductor technology for infrared light sensors that are 12 times more sensitive than the best existing devices, making them ideal for fast, accurate 3D imaging. Set up by researchers at the University of Sheffield, Phlux’s devices have many potential applications especially in light detection and ranging (LIDAR), laser range finders, optical-fibre test instruments and optical and quantum communications networks.

In LIDAR, Phlux’s can have 12 times greater image resolution for a given transmitter power. Its sensors could also make vehicles much safer by enabling higher-resolution images to be created over longer distances, making safety systems more effective. The first volume market for the company is likely to be in communications and where a >10 dB increase in detector sensitivity is going to be well received by the market.

Given the number of markets that will benefit from an “over an order of magnitude” improvement, Phlux is one to watch for a future Business Innovation Award too.

Medical marvel

Let me finish by mentioning Crainio, a medical technology spin-off company from City, University of London, which has won the 2024 Lee Lucas award. This award honours promising start-up firms in the medical and healthcare sector thanks to a generous donation by Mike and Ann Lee (née Lucas). These companies need all the support, time and money they can get given the many challenging regulatory requirements in the medical sector.

Crainio’s technology allows healthcare workers to measure intracranial pressure (ICP), a vital indicator of brain health after a head injury. Currently, the only way to measure ICP directly is for a neurosurgeon to drill a hole in a patient’s skull and place an expensive probe in the brain. It’s a highly invasive procedure that can’t easily be carried out in the “golden hours” immediately after an accident, requiring access to scarce and expensive neurosurgery resources. The procedure is also medically risky, leading to potential infection, bleeding and other complications.

Crainio’s technology eliminates these risks, enabling direct measurement of ICP through a simple non-invasive probe applied to the forehead. The technology – using infrared photoplethysmography (PPG) combined with machine learning – is based on years of research and development work conducted by Panicos Kyriacou and his team of biomedical engineers at City.

Good levels of accuracy have been demonstrated in clinical studies conducted at the Royal London Hospital. It certainly seems a much better plan than drilling a hole in your head as I am sure you can agree – making Crainio a worthy winner, with its non-invasive technology it should have a positive impact on patients globally. I hope the regulatory hurdles can be quickly cleared so the company can start helping patients as soon as possible.

As I have mentioned before, all physics-based firms require time and energy to develop products and become globally significant. There’s also the perennial difficulty of explaining a product idea, which is often quite specialized, to potential investors who have little or no science background. An IOP start-up award can therefore show that your technology has won approval from judges with solid physics and business experience.

I hope, therefore, that your company, if you have one, will be inspired to apply. Also remember that the IOP offers three other awards (Katharine Burr Blodgett, Denis Gabor and Clifford Paterson) for individuals or teams who have been involved in innovative physics with a commercial angle. Good luck – and remember, you have to be in it to win it. Award entries for 2025 will be open in February 2025.

The post Imaging and medical-physics firms bag Institute of Physics business awards 2024 appeared first on Physics World.

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商业创新奖 宇宙射线成像 柔性X射线探测器 红外传感器 非侵入式医疗
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