CEA-Leti: Laboratoire d'électronique des technologies de l'information


CEA-Leti is a research institute for electronics and information technologies, based in Grenoble, France. It is one of the world's largest organizations for applied research in microelectronics and nanotechnology. It is located within the center of the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission.

Overview

A subsidiary of the Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives, France's nuclear and renewable energy commission, Leti was established in 1967 in Grenoble, a university town in the French Alps that has now become an internationally recognized scientific hub. Today, the CEA-Leti is granted over 286 patents a year and handles a portfolio of more than 3,100 patented inventions.
The institute employs 1,900 people, while training more than 162 graduate students, 36 PostDoc and hosting 200 collaborators from its research and industrial partners. It has extensive facilities for micro- and nanotechnology research, including 200 mm and 300 mm fabrication lines, 11,000m2 of cleanroom space, and laboratories and equipment that provide first-class nanoscale characterization, chemistry and biology, photonics, design and upstream research capabilities.

Subsidiaries

CEA-Leti has the following subsidiaries:
  • DACLE: Department of Architectures, Design and Embedded Software
  • DCOS: Silicon Components Department
  • DOPT: Optics and Photonics Department
  • DSYS: Systems and solutions integration Department
  • DTBS: MicroTechnologies for Biology and Health Department
  • DTSI: Silicon technologies Department
  • DPFT : ''Département des PlateFormes Technologiques''

Mission

CEA-Leti's mission is to create and transfer to industry novel technologies, capable of improving the quality of life of individuals worldwide. Leti does this by helping companies to bridge the gap between basic research and manufacturing, creating new spin-off companies and drawing on its extensive know-how to help its industrial partners to excel. In all its activities, Leti maintains a focus on usefulness and manufacturability.

Milestones

Primary areas of activity and applications

  • Micro- and nanotechnologies for microelectronics
  • Micro- and nanotechnologies for biology and healthcare
  • Developing and integrating microsystems
  • Imaging technology for medicine and security
  • Wireless and smart devices
  • Space and science
  • Energy, Transport and environment
CEA-Leti's technologies provide innovation and competitive advantage for its partners across a wide range of industrial sectors including aerospace, automotive, communications, health care, housing and information technology.

Partnerships

CEA-Leti researchers work closely with industrial partners from around the world in focused strategic partnerships to accelerate the development and commercialization of new technology. Leti also is engaged with numerous cooperative research initiatives, including:
CEA-Leti's European partnerships are aimed at strengthening Europe's competitive position in key technological areas and developing new technologies. Examples include:
  • The Heterogeneous Technology Alliance
  • pHotonics ELectronics functional Integration on CMOS
  • WADIMOS, for demonstrating a photonic interconnect layer on CMOS
  • EARTH, energy efficiency in mobile broadband systems

Spinoffs

Since its early days, CEA-Leti has encouraged the transfer of technology to private industry through an ambitious spinoff program that supports the formation of new companies. Thus far, 68 companies have been formed as CEA-Leti spinoffs, resulting in the creation of more than 2,500 jobs. Some spin-offs include

CEO

CEA-Leti is organized under the leadership of a CEO, a role successively held by the following individuals:
  • Sebastien Dauvé
  • Emmanuel Sabonnadière