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§ Private Profile · Veldhoven, Noord-Brabant, The Netherlands
Morphotonics is a technology company.
Morphotonics is a global leader in large-area nanoimprinting, providing innovative hardware, expert processes, and proprietary materials to support the mass manufacturing of consumer electronics.
Morphotonics has raised $11.0M across 1 funding round.
Morphotonics has raised $11.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Morphotonics has raised $11.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $11.0M Series B in September 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 1, 2024 | $11M Series B | BOM Brabant Ventures | Prime Ventures | Announced |
Morphotonics has raised $11.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Morphotonics's investors include BOM Brabant Ventures, Prime Ventures.
Morphotonics is a Dutch technology company specializing in roll-to-plate (R2P) nanoimprint lithography equipment for imprinting nano- and microstructures on large-area substrates.[1][2][7] It builds production systems—including R&D tools (Portis series), pilot lines, and fully automated industrial machines (Aurora series)—that enable cost-effective manufacturing of advanced optics for displays, AR/VR waveguides, microLEDs, solar panels, and LED lighting.[2][3][7] Serving display manufacturers, consumer electronics firms, and innovators in Europe, the US, and Asia (with a new branch in Suzhou, China), Morphotonics solves scalability challenges in nanostructure fabrication, delivering high yields (90-95%), precision at wafer-scale and beyond, and energy-efficient solutions like anti-glare textures, glasses-free 3D displays, and immersive AR glasses.[3][4][5] Recent momentum includes a $10+ million Series B funding round in 2024 to scale operations and expand in Asia, alongside deliveries of large-scale lines to Chinese customers and development of the Cypris machine for 6 million annual waveguide AR glasses.[3][4][6]
Founded in 2014 in Eindhoven's Brainport Region, Netherlands, Morphotonics pioneered large-area nanoimprint technology as an alternative to traditional lithography, focusing on optics and photonics rather than semiconductors (distinguishing it from nearby ASML).[5][6] The idea emerged from expertise in replicating intricate nano- and micron-scale structures on expansive surfaces, initially targeting anti-glare textures for outdoor-readable devices, then expanding to 3D/light field displays and holographic optics.[5] Early traction built through R&D systems, evolving into commercial products like the Portis and Aurora series, with pivotal moments including customer pilots achieving 93% yields and the 2024 Series B led by BOM and Innovation Industries to fuel global growth.[1][3][6]
Morphotonics stands out in nanoimprint lithography through these key advantages:
Morphotonics rides the surge in AR/VR, microLEDs, and advanced displays, where demand for immersive, energy-efficient visuals in smartphones, smart glasses, and outdoor devices is exploding amid digital ubiquity.[3][4][5] Timing aligns with AR glasses mass adoption, as its high-yield R2P tech addresses manufacturing bottlenecks—previously limited by low-throughput methods—enabling cost reductions and 90%+ yields critical for commercialization.[3][7] Market forces like Asia's display dominance and sustainability pushes (e.g., efficient solar/LEDs) favor it, while influencing the ecosystem by standardizing large-area nanoimprinting, empowering innovators in consumer electronics and photonics.[4][6]
Morphotonics is primed for explosive growth, with Series B funds accelerating Cypris deployments, China scaling, and waveguide dominance to hit mass AR production targets.[3][6] Trends like AR ubiquity, 3D/holographic displays, and efficient photonics will propel it, potentially evolving from equipment provider to optics manufacturing standard-setter amid Asia's supply chain shift. As the go-to for nanoscale precision at scale, it redefines display interactions, building on its Dutch innovation roots to lead the visual tech revolution.[4][5]