Bolstered by the success of our partners, Angstrom Engineering continues to grow

Canadian Business and Maclean’s released its list of Canadian companies that showed significant growth this year, and Angstrom Engineering was on it for the 6th year in a row. According to the owners, Andrew Campbell and Dave Pitts, this is due to the continued success of our customers, who are referred to and treated as partners.

Ranking Canada’s Fastest-Growing Companies by five-year revenue growth, the Growth 500—formerly known as the PROFIT 500—profiles the country’s most successful entrepreneurial businesses. Given the growth of the industry as a whole, as well as Angstrom’s unique position as a trusted partner for scientists all over the world, the news is unsurprising, though welcome. Angstrom Engineering focuses on doing everything possible for its partners. “Our success is tied very closely with our partner’s success. When they do well, we do well, so it makes sense to do absolutely everything we can to make sure they do well,” says co-owner Andrew Campbell.

When employees of the company attempt to describe to friends and family what we do, it can be difficult. What is a thin film deposition system, after all? Thin film deposition covers a very broad spectrum of applications and products, including optical coatings, electronics, display technologies, physical coatings (on things like sports equipment, artificial limbs, and drill bits), fundamental scientific research, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), medical coatings (like antibacterial silver coatings), medical implants, next-generation solid-state batteries, and a lot more.

Thin film is employed in so many technologies that we all use every single day that it takes considerable effort not to take it for granted. It’s also used extensively in developing novel technologies by some of the world’s most brilliant scientific minds, innovating ideas so far only conceived in science fiction, like octopus inspired camouflage clothing, edible electronics, smart-clothes, and even robots with the sense of touch.

Three areas of significant growth for Angstrom over the past 5 years are OLED, perovskite solar energy generation, and quantum computing. Angstrom Engineering was part of pioneering days of OLED in the 1990’s, when we supplied the means to develop the technology to researchers at Princeton University and University of Michigan. 2013 to present represent the pioneering days of solar’s wundermaterial perovskite, which many believe to be the cheaper, less energy intensive successor to silicon. Angstrom Engineering provides many of the world’s leading perovskite researchers with the tools they need to bring about this potential solar revolution. Finally, investment is ever-increasing in the realm of quantum computing. What was once a technology assigned to theoretical prototypes is now going mainstream. Once again, Angstrom Engineering finds itself providing tools to quantum computing’s pioneers who are fabricating quantum bits (qubits) via thin film fabricated Josephson junctions.

Angstrom Engineering’s DNA consists of a mandate to partner with its customers, to provide them the best possible product, followed up by tangible human support. When this recipe is combined with agile leadership, a quietly competent workforce, and most importantly, partnerships with brilliant innovators and industrialists from all over the world, then growth is sure to follow.

 

About the Growth 500

For 30 years, the Growth 500 ranking of Canada’s Fastest-Growing Companies has been Canada’s most respected and influential ranking of entrepreneurial achievement. Developed by PROFIT and now published in a special Growth 500 print issue of Canadian Business (packaged with the October issue of Maclean’s magazine) and online at Growth500.ca and CanadianBusiness.com, the Growth 500 ranks Canadian companies on five-year revenue growth. For more information on the ranking, visit Growth500.ca.

Having arrived in Brazil, our partner’s logistics team takes the lead, taking it out of the wooden box so that it can fit through the door of the facility. The journey resulted in the standard small bumps and dents that are categorized and logged so that our installation team can quickly and effectively get the system up and running, which they do.

Finally, all that’s left to do is to fabricate some superconducting circuits, and further the field of quantum computing. Our partners at Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Fisicas (CBPF) expressed their excitement at having gained the capabilities  of partnering with us in this translated LinkedIn post:

 

It is with great enthusiasm that we announce the arrival of the newest equipment, from Angstrom Engineering, to the Quantum Technologies Laboratory of CBPF. This laboratory is complementary to Labnano, one of the strategic laboratories of SisNANO – the National System of Nanotechnology Laboratories of the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI).

SisNANO is comprised of a set of laboratories focused on research, development and innovation (RD&I) in nanosciences and nanotechnologies, with the essential characteristic of being multi-user and open access to public and private institutions.

Acquired with funding from Finep and support from MCTI, the new equipment will allow CBPF to advance in the manufacture of superconducting quantum nanodevices, such as Josephson junctions and SQUIDS. These devices are essential for the development of future quantum chips, which promise to transform areas such as computing, secure communication and metrology.

The impact of this advance is also connected to related projects funded by FAPERJ, CNPq and Petrobras, consolidating a robust research ecosystem in Brazil.

This achievement reinforces the commitment of CBPF and MCTI to leading the frontier of scientific research, contributing to enabling the country to compete in a global scenario marked by disruptive and strategic advances.

We would like to thank the institutions involved and the professionals who made this achievement possible. We invite the scientific, technological and industrial community to closely monitor the transformative results that this new infrastructure will provide.