C&EN的10家值得关注的初创企业

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Several of the founders in this year’s 10 Start-Ups to Watch fit this description.For Samantha Anderson, it was impossible to stand on the sidelines watching plastic pollution get worse. So while finishing a PhD at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL), she cofounded DePoly, a company that’s developing a better way to recycle polyethylene terephthalate.Similarly, after earning his PhD, Ryan Pearson went straight to Cyclotron Road, a fellowship program at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory that helps scientists turn their research into companies. That’s where Cypris Materials got off the ground. The company is developing new colorants that it hopes will reduce carbon emissions and pollution from coloring clothes, cars, and other products.Lately, C&EN’s pages have been filled with stories about start-ups founded by young chemists. A piece in July dug into Pivot Bio, a company trying to replace carbon-intensive synthetic fertilizers with microbes. The firm, now valued at more than $1 billion, was founded in 2011 by a pair of PhD candidates. A cover story in March featured Twelve, which hopes to make jet fuel out of carbon dioxide. That company took shape during Etosha Cave’s 2015 Activate Fellowship, a 2-year program that gives scientists funding and technical resources to turn themselves into founders.Not all companies in this year’s selection have stories like this. Some of them were founded by serial entrepreneurs with several companies under their belts. Others were catalyzed by government support or started by veterans from big companies who abandoned the security of incumbent firms to try something audacious.We considered hundreds of start-ups before settling on our finalists. They came from reader submissions, the pages of C&EN, and our reporters, who talked to chemists and entrepreneurs. Keep an eye on them. We’re excited to see what they do. Know about an interesting chemistry start-up? Nominate it for our 2024 feature at cenm.ag/startupnom. ContentsBelharra Therapeutics P.18Cypris Materials P.20DePoly P.22Elicit Plant P.24H2Pro P.26Halda Therapeutics P.28Mitra Chem P.30Septerna P.32Sublime Systems P.34Trillium Renewable Chemicals P.36On our radar P.38 CONTRIBUTORSEDITORIAL LEAD:Matt BloisPROJECT MANAGER: Michael SheehanWRITERS:Craig Bettenhausen, Matt Blois, Britt E. Erickson, Bethany Halford, Laura Howes, Laurel Oldach, Mark Peplow, Alex Scott, Gina Vitale, and Vanessa ZainzingerEDITORS: Matt Blois and Michael McCoyCREATIVE DIRECTOR:Robert BrysonART DIRECTOR:William A. LudwigUI/UX DIRECTOR:Kay YounWEB PRODUCERS:Luis A. Carrillo, Ty A. Finocchiaro, Jennifer Muller, and Seamus MurphyPRODUCTION EDITORS:Allison Elliot, Jonathan Forney, David Padgham, Raadhia Patwary, and Sydney SmithCOPYEDITORS: Michele Arboit and Sabrina J. 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The company is developing new colorants that it hopes will reduce carbon emissions and pollution from coloring clothes, cars, and other products.Lately, C&EN’s pages have been filled with stories about start-ups founded by young chemists. A piece in July dug into Pivot Bio, a company trying to replace carbon-intensive synthetic fertilizers with microbes. The firm, now valued at more than $1 billion, was founded in 2011 by a pair of PhD candidates. A cover story in March featured Twelve, which hopes to make jet fuel out of carbon dioxide. That company took shape during Etosha Cave’s 2015 Activate Fellowship, a 2-year program that gives scientists funding and technical resources to turn themselves into founders.Not all companies in this year’s selection have stories like this. Some of them were founded by serial entrepreneurs with several companies under their belts. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

C&EN十大值得关注的创业公司:通过创业实现影响力分享分享于facebook twitter微信链接于redditemail C&EN, 2023, 101 (37), pp 16-17 2023年11月13日引用本文:C&EN 101, 37,16 -17长期以来,有前途的年轻化学家的标准职业道路包括获得博士学位,在博士后研究岗位上进一步磨练技能,最终在大学、国家实验室或跨国化学公司找到一份工作。但还有另一条路。来自世界各地的化学家不是试图用尽可能多的同行评议的出版物来填满他们的简历,而是利用他们的技能创办新公司。通常,他们的动机是有机会减缓气候变化,对抗污染,或养活饥饿的人。今年十大值得关注的初创企业中,有几位创始人符合这种描述。对萨曼莎·安德森(Samantha Anderson)来说,她不可能袖手旁观,眼睁睁地看着塑料污染日益恶化。因此,当她在瑞士洛桑联邦理工学院(EPFL)完成博士学位时,她与人共同创立了DePoly公司,该公司正在开发一种更好的回收聚对苯二甲酸乙二醇酯的方法。同样,在获得博士学位后,瑞安·皮尔森(Ryan Pearson)直接进入了劳伦斯伯克利国家实验室(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)的回旋加速器之路(Cyclotron Road),这是一个帮助科学家将研究成果转化为公司的奖学金项目。塞浦路斯材料公司就是在那里起步的。该公司正在开发新的着色剂,希望能减少衣服、汽车和其他产品染色过程中的碳排放和污染。最近,C&EN的页面上充斥着由年轻化学家创立的初创企业的故事。7月份的一篇文章深入研究了Pivot Bio公司,该公司试图用微生物取代碳密集型合成肥料。该公司于2011年由两位博士候选人创立,目前估值超过10亿美元。3月份的一篇封面故事介绍了Twelve公司,该公司希望用二氧化碳制造飞机燃料。这家公司是在埃托沙·凯夫2015年发起的“激活奖学金”项目中形成的,该项目为期两年,为科学家提供资金和技术资源,帮助他们成为创始人。并非所有入选今年榜单的公司都有这样的故事。其中一些是由连续创业家创立的,他们旗下有几家公司。其他一些则是由政府支持促成的,或者是由大公司的老员工创办的,他们放弃了现有公司的安全保障,去尝试一些大胆的东西。我们考虑了数百家初创企业,然后确定了最终入围企业。它们来自于读者的意见,C&EN的页面,以及我们的记者,他们与化学家和企业家交谈。盯紧他们。我们很期待他们能做些什么。知道一个有趣的化学创业公司吗?在cenm.ag/startupnom上提名它为我们2024年的专题。内容belharra Therapeutics p.18cypis Materials P.20DePoly P.22Elicit Plant P.24H2Pro P.26Halda Therapeutics P.28Mitra Chem P.30Septerna P.32Sublime Systems P.34Trillium Renewable Chemicals P.36On our radar P.38作者:Matt Blois项目经理:Michael sheehan作者:Craig Bettenhausen, Matt Blois, Britt E. Erickson, Bethany Halford, Laura Howes, Laurel Oldach, Mark Peplow, Alex Scott, Gina Vitale和Vanessa zainzinger编辑:马特·布洛伊斯和迈克尔·麦考伊创意总监:罗伯特·布莱森艺术总监:威廉·a·路德维希ui /UX导演:凯·扬web制片人:路易斯·a·卡瑞略,泰·a·菲诺基亚罗,詹妮弗·穆勒和谢默斯·墨菲制片编辑:艾莉森·埃利奥特,乔纳森·福尼,大卫·帕德汉姆,拉迪亚·帕特瓦瑞和悉尼·史密斯编辑:米歇尔·阿博伊特和萨布里娜·j·阿什威尔观众参与编辑:利亚姆·康伦下载PDF
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C&EN’s 10 Start-Ups to Watch
START-UPS C&EN’s 10 Start-Ups to WatchAiming for impact through entrepreneurship ShareShare onFacebookTwitterWechatLinked InRedditEmail C&EN, 2023, 101 (37), pp 16–17November 13, 2023Cite this:C&EN 101, 37, 16-17(Credit: Kay Youn/Will Ludwig/C&EN)Figure1of1The standard career path for promising young chemists has long involved earning a PhD, honing skills further in a postdoctoral research position, and ultimately landing a job at a university, a national laboratory, or a multinational chemical firm. But there is an alternative route. Rather than trying to fill their curriculum vitae with as many peer-reviewed publications as possible, chemists from all over the world are using their skills to start new companies. Often, they’re motivated by the chance to slow climate change, combat pollution, or feed hungry people. Several of the founders in this year’s 10 Start-Ups to Watch fit this description.For Samantha Anderson, it was impossible to stand on the sidelines watching plastic pollution get worse. So while finishing a PhD at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne (EPFL), she cofounded DePoly, a company that’s developing a better way to recycle polyethylene terephthalate.Similarly, after earning his PhD, Ryan Pearson went straight to Cyclotron Road, a fellowship program at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory that helps scientists turn their research into companies. That’s where Cypris Materials got off the ground. The company is developing new colorants that it hopes will reduce carbon emissions and pollution from coloring clothes, cars, and other products.Lately, C&EN’s pages have been filled with stories about start-ups founded by young chemists. A piece in July dug into Pivot Bio, a company trying to replace carbon-intensive synthetic fertilizers with microbes. The firm, now valued at more than $1 billion, was founded in 2011 by a pair of PhD candidates. A cover story in March featured Twelve, which hopes to make jet fuel out of carbon dioxide. That company took shape during Etosha Cave’s 2015 Activate Fellowship, a 2-year program that gives scientists funding and technical resources to turn themselves into founders.Not all companies in this year’s selection have stories like this. Some of them were founded by serial entrepreneurs with several companies under their belts. Others were catalyzed by government support or started by veterans from big companies who abandoned the security of incumbent firms to try something audacious.We considered hundreds of start-ups before settling on our finalists. They came from reader submissions, the pages of C&EN, and our reporters, who talked to chemists and entrepreneurs. Keep an eye on them. We’re excited to see what they do. Know about an interesting chemistry start-up? Nominate it for our 2024 feature at cenm.ag/startupnom. ContentsBelharra Therapeutics P.18Cypris Materials P.20DePoly P.22Elicit Plant P.24H2Pro P.26Halda Therapeutics P.28Mitra Chem P.30Septerna P.32Sublime Systems P.34Trillium Renewable Chemicals P.36On our radar P.38 CONTRIBUTORSEDITORIAL LEAD:Matt BloisPROJECT MANAGER: Michael SheehanWRITERS:Craig Bettenhausen, Matt Blois, Britt E. Erickson, Bethany Halford, Laura Howes, Laurel Oldach, Mark Peplow, Alex Scott, Gina Vitale, and Vanessa ZainzingerEDITORS: Matt Blois and Michael McCoyCREATIVE DIRECTOR:Robert BrysonART DIRECTOR:William A. LudwigUI/UX DIRECTOR:Kay YounWEB PRODUCERS:Luis A. Carrillo, Ty A. Finocchiaro, Jennifer Muller, and Seamus MurphyPRODUCTION EDITORS:Allison Elliot, Jonathan Forney, David Padgham, Raadhia Patwary, and Sydney SmithCOPYEDITORS: Michele Arboit and Sabrina J. AshwellAUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT EDITOR:Liam ConlonDownload PDF
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