The work carried out by the Fun-COMP consortium defined the state-of-the-art in the area of intergrated phase-change photonic computing.
Over the duration of the project we published 41 journal papers and 38 conference papers. Many of our papers are in the most prestigious of journals (Nature, Nature Nanotechnology, Science Advances, Advanced Materials, Nano Letters, Optica etc.), and these have generated very high levels of interest and publicity.
Just to give one example (but there are many), our paper in Nature on the Fun-COMP tensor core matrix-vector multiplier system was featured in a special ‘News and Views’ article in Nature itself, and has been reported on by numerous tech websites (41 news outlets, 61tweets, 11 blogs and 4 Wikipedia pages to date), and currently has over 450 cites (google scholar) and an altimetric score of 331. In addition, Fun-COMP partners have increasingly been invited to contribute to key roadmapping and review publications on the future of photonic processing hardware (e.g. the recent review in Nature Photonics, see DOI:10.1038/s41566-020-00754-y; the IoP Roadmap on emerging hardware and technology for machine learning,
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6528/aba70f(öffnet in neuem Fenster))
Exploitation activity and opportunities arising from the Fun-COMP project are very significant, and include the following:
• Several patents either filed or in the process of filing by various partners, including joint patents
• A spin-out company, Salience Labs, has been founded by Fun-COMP partners (see D5.6)
• Numerous follow-on activities and projects have been established and will help take Fun-COMP technologies up the TRL ladder
The exploitation potential of Fun-COMP technologies is very high and, while there are still many open challenges to meet industrial needs in terms of performance, fabrication cost, scalability, reliability, product-level fabrication, and system integration of Fun-COMP technologies, the unprecedented speed achieved by the photonic technologies developed in Fun-COMP has convinced funding bodies (EU, EPSRC) and investors (Salience Labs) to further exploit them for at least the next 5 years and undoubtedly beyond.