About Us
Aneeve is a startup company based in Los Angeles, CA. The company was founded in 2007 by supplying pristinely aligned carbon nanotubes on insulator materials and silicon to the defense sector for high frequency applications. These products have been scaled and now commercially available for purchase via our website. Our main customer today is Northrup Grumman. Aneeve’s mission is to develop low-cost nanotechnology based platforms for emerging markets such as wireless and sensor applications where cost and power consumption are key concerns. In line with this mission, Aneeve is developing various CNT and graphene based platforms for applications ranging for low-cost integrated circuits and high-performance, high-speed nanoelectronics. The company is working with corporations such as Lockheed Martin and Intel as well as with leading US universities such as Stanford, USC and UCLA.
Founders
Kos Galatsis is Aneeve’s Chief Executive Officer and co-founder of Aneeve. He has experience in the management of high-impact high-risk nanotechnology programs working with Intel, MICRON, IBM, SRC, DARPA, UCLA, USC and Stanford. He holds an MBA in Financial Management and a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Australian universities.
Kang L Wang is a pioneering scientist and technologist bringing a plethora of experience in charge based nanodevices. He currently holds the Raytheon Chair Professor of Physical Science and UC Distinguished Professor in Electrical Engineering Department at UCLA. Kang L. Wang currently also serves as the Director for two semiconductor industry funded research centers - the FCRP Center on Functional Engineered Nano Architectonics and the Western Institute of Nanoelectronics. He received his PhD degree in 1970 from the MIT.
Chongwu Zhou brings with him his experience in CNT fabrication, devices and CNT-on-insulator technology. Zhou holds joint appointments within the USC College departments of physics and chemistry. He received his Ph.D. in 1999 from Yale University, and worked as a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University from 1999 to 2000. His research interests include synthesis of nanomaterials, nanoelectronics and bionanotechnology. He has published more than 70 scientific papers, including papers in Science and Nature.
