News

Compound Semiconductor Applications Catapult to open Strathclyde-based office in Scotland

Compound Semiconductor Applications (CSA) Catapult, the UK’s authority on compound semiconductor applications and commercialisation, will have a presence in Scotland for the first time as part of its plans to support industry across the UK.

Working in partnership with the University of Strathclyde and the National Manufacturing Institute Scotland (NMIS), the office in Scotland will expand CSA Catapult’s expertise in power electronics and packaging work from the automotive and industrial segments to high power industries such as energy, aerospace, marine and rail.   

Together with partners, CSA Catapult Scotland will offer an improved design optimisation and manufacturing process for power electronics and packaging, with a specific focus on high power industries such as transport and energy.  

The work undertaken at the CSA Catapult Scotland office will focus on power module design and manufacturing scale-up processes, enabling seamless transitions from research to design to development and reducing the time for products and innovations to reach market.   

The CSA Catapult Scotland office, which is due to open in Summer 2023, will be based at Strathclyde’s Technology Innovation Centre in Glasgow, providing a link between the work undertaken at CSA Catapult’s Innovation Centre in Newport and the Catapult’s network of partners in Scotland.

Leading names

Strathclyde and NMIS are firmly established in the high-power electronics industry and boast relationships with some of the leading names in the industry, which will help drive CSA Catapult’s mission of supporting clusters of excellence within the industry and building supply chains.

CSA Catapult Scotland have two focus areas, concentrating on a manufacturing readiness level (MRL) and a technology readiness level (TRL).

CSA Scotland will help customers to scale up their prototypes to a level where they can be manufactured on scale, whilst the TRL work will be focused on optimising power electronics for high power applications in the energy and transport markets. 

Staff at the CSA Catapult Scotland will initially work on the virtual design of power packaging modules and assembly, whilst at the same time building up relationships with customers and companies across the cluster in Scotland.

Power electronics help control and transform electrical power through switching devices and are used across a wide range of industries such as aerospace, automotive, energy, healthcare and space.

Energy industry

The global power electronics market size was valued at $52.70 billion in 2022 and is projected to grow from $61.94 billion in 2023 to $153.30 billion by 2030.

The energy industry is anticipated to capture a sizeable share of this growth due to the rising acceptance of power electronics devices in renewable energy systems.

Wide bandgap compound semiconductors such as gallium nitride and silicon carbide will be more frequently used in power electronics due to their higher switching speeds, lower current loss and higher power density, as well as enabling the fabrication of more compact devices.

CSA Catapult's existing power electronics expertise is one of the UK’s most advanced and comprehensive modelling, characterisation, integration and validation facilities for power electronics innovation.

This is coupled with a world class advanced packaging lab with cutting-edge equipment and techniques in assembling customers’ prototypes, which can be used to verify a design anywhere from proof-of-concept stage up to a final production unit.

Professor Sir Jim McDonald, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Strathclyde and chair of the NMIS Board, said: “We are delighted to welcome the CSA Catapult to our campus in the heart of Glasgow City Innovation District.

“By co-locating with Strathclyde and NMIS, the CSA Catapult will be well placed to access our sector leading power electronics and electrical systems research, advanced manufacturing innovation capabilities and facilities and our strong relationships with industry partners.

By establishing these collaborative links, we can accelerate the deployment of process and product innovation in the energy and transportation sectors.

Martin McHugh, Chief Executive Officer at CSA Catapult said: “Expanding our capabilities to Scotland will allow us to engage more closely with an extremely strong cluster of companies and research institutes at the forefront of compound semiconductor technologies.

“Furthermore, our activities in Scotland will support our ambitions to expand into both lower and higher TRL and MRL activities to reduce the risks of successful translational research and reduce the time for products and innovations to reach market.

“We are extremely delighted to be working with the University of Strathclyde and the National Manufacturing Institute Scotland, who are already well established across the region, on expanding our capabilities, building new supply chains and helping the UK economy grow.”