Business News

Oxford Innovation Finance joins £2.8m Silicon Microgravity investment round

Published by
Sam Pither

Oxford Innovation Finance’s Angel Network has invested in Silicon Microgravity, a technology company developing Inertial and Gravity sensors.

It signals the close of the first stage of SMG’s £2.8 million funding rounding with £1.8 million new funding from the UK Innovation & Science Seed Fund (UKI2S), the Oxford Innovation EIS Growth Fund, Oxford Innovation Finance’s Angel Network (OION) and the Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA).

This latest funding round was focused on raising investment to enable the commercialisation of SMG’s unique MEMS (micro-electrical mechanical systems) technology. MEMS is a technology used to create microscopic integrated devices or systems which combine mechanical and electrical parts.

Its high-performance accelerometers and gyroscopes which deliver MEMS-based tactical and navigation-grade sensing will disrupt the motion sensing markets as it develops the ability to be volume manufactured.

SMG was spun-out from the University of Cambridge and has developed proprietary resonant MEMS technology that will move MEMS sensors into the high-end $4 billion Inertial Sensing market.  The same technology is also being used by SMG to develop Gravity sensors that can image the subsurface by detecting density anomalies with applications in construction and infrastructure, security and defence, mineral exploration and carbon capture.

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Francis Neill, CEO of SMG, said: “This new investment provides us with the funding to take our game changing technology to commercialisation, helping deliver the UK government’s semiconductor and technology strategy. Our Inertial sensors are already gaining strong industry interest globally with a major aerospace and defence contractor having already placed contracts.

“Our revolutionary gravity sensor will be commercialised later this year with the industry interest shown by our acceptance on to Europe’s largest infrastructure accelerator program and the award of funding from the Department for Business and Trade railway construction innovation competition.  We are very excited for this next stage in SMG’s journey.”

Alexander Leigh, Investment Director for UKI2S and Future Planet Capital Group said: “We are proud to cornerstone this investment into this UK-based DeepTech spin out from Cambridge. It’s evidence of our ambition to back innovative companies that are forging ahead in providing impactful solutions across key markets.

“SMG is one of the early investments from the UKI2S dual-use fund dedicated to early-stage companies which can positively impact defence and security. We are excited to be working with our partners in DSTL and DASA in leveraging defence sector support for technologies that also have clear use cases in other markets. In the case of SMG, we see a number of exciting and environmentally beneficial use cases in civil engineering, mineral mapping and carbon capture storage.”

Richard Cooper, Managing Director at Oxford Innovation Finance commented: “SMG is revolutionising motion and gravity measurement with its patent protected MEMS technology and leading MEMS experts. Subsurface imaging with gravity has multiple market pulls as it can fundamentally reduce the risk of unforeseen ground conditions.

“The need for gravity sensors is well recognised but present systems prove to be either too slow or too expensive. At Oxford Innovation Finance, we are focused on supporting the best technology businesses being founded in the UK, developing bold ideas to solve the challenges for future generations.”

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Sam Pither

Sam is the Regional Editor of Biz News, responsible for both Hampshire and Dorset. A new recruit to journalism, Sam started writing for the Business Magazine as a freelancer in May of 2022 after completing his degree in English at University College London. His passion for local businesses and ability to tell a story soon caught the attention of the publication’s management team and have led to his meteoric rise. Sam, who lives in central Reading, takes a particular interest in technology, gaming and food and drink, having been a chef before starting his degree.

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