Thursday, June 14, 2012

TeraWand receives KickStart award in creation of handheld THz screening device

http://lxer.com/module/newswire/view/168602/
Nicholas Tan's company TeraWand aims to be the leading manufacturer and supplier of handheld Terahertz screening devices - allowing security personnel to easily and consistently locate weapons, drugs or explosives at airports, seaports and a range of other high-risk environments.

Marketing chief for Cambridge University Entrepreneurs (CUE), Tan believes he can steer his technology to commercialisation in a year or so thanks to the development capital and IP expertise earned in the inaugural KickStart competition. He is working on accelerating a miniaturised version of the device. Young Cambridge University entrepreneurs dominated the latter stages of the competition, which was backed with £10k cash from globally renowned product innovation hothouse Cambridge Consultants and PEM Technology, the technology arm of local accountancy practice PEM - plus £5k's worth of IP input from patent and TM attorney Mathys & Squire.

Since CambridgeElevator - a social network for startups - launched the competition with its own arrival on the scene last November, entries have poured in from as far afield as India and Africa. More than 50 global entrants made the shortlist but UK and Cambridge candidates have swiftly come to the fore.

Tan explained: "Terahertz radiation can be used to identify illicit drugs and explosive substances, which give specific colour signatures when irradiated. "In addition, this radiation can pass through soft materials like clothing and paper and, unlike X-rays, is harmless to humans. As such, handheld terahertz scanners can fill a void in the $130 billion global airport security equipment market by allowing security personnel to easily identify and locate drugs or explosives hidden under clothes or in luggage without invasive methods or sniffer dogs which are potentially unreliable.

"TeraWand's scanners can also find a secondary market in postal facilities for mail screening."

Runner up was VocalIQ, headed up by Blaise Thompson, who is supported by Cambridge University's celebrated 'Dontrepreneur,' Steve Young.

VocalIQ aims to become the leading provider of of voice interfaces for computer systems. By using novel statistical models of dialogue, VocalIQ can dramatically improve the performance of voice-based systems.

Founded in March 2010, the company has developed its technology along with a prototype system allowing small businesses to provide 24-hour phone bookings. The company's algorithms explicitly model the uncertainty caused by speech recognition errors. Automated call centres, mobile applications and in-car navigation are three application areas.

Third placed was Sean Cheng's venture, Heliomobil - a solar energy startup developing low-cost, out of the box heliostats for residential and small scale utility solar power markets.

Heliomobil is providing affordable and easy-to-use supplemental technologies for residential solar energy collection systems that reduce initial investment costs, increase energy savings and promote global solar energy adoption. CambridgeElevator CEO, Richard Kirkby, presided over the presentation ceremony at Cambridge Consultants. He was joined by Cambridge Consultants CEO, Brian Moon; Chris Walklett from PEM Technology and Alan MacDougall of Mathys & Squire - plus representatives of shortlisted companies.

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