Cambridge, MA – Harvard University’s commitment to translating groundbreaking research into practical solutions for pressing global challenges has taken a significant step forward with the announcement of the 2025 awards from the Harvard Grid Accelerator program. This initiative is designed to bridge the gap between pioneering laboratory discoveries and their potential commercialization, focusing on technologies poised to address urgent societal needs.
Three distinct research projects have been selected to receive support from the Grid Accelerator, reflecting the program’s broad scope and strategic focus on areas of critical importance: improving cardiovascular health, managing the escalating data demands driven by artificial intelligence, and unlocking the future potential of quantum computation.
Bridging the Gap: The Grid Accelerator’s Mission
The Harvard Grid Accelerator program builds upon the successful track record of the Office of Technology Development Physical Sciences and Engineering Accelerator. Since its inception in 2013, the combined Grid/OTD Accelerator has played a pivotal role in fostering innovation, providing crucial support to projects with high potential for real-world impact. This support has historically included resources and guidance aimed at de-risking technologies and preparing them for market entry.
The program’s success is underscored by its outcomes: it has directly contributed to the launch of 19 startups. Furthermore, these ventures and associated technology licenses have collectively raised nearly half a billion dollars, demonstrating the program’s effectiveness in cultivating commercially viable technologies from academic research and attracting significant investment.
Innovations for Cardiovascular Health
One of the 2025 awarded projects focuses on a critical area of public health: cardiovascular disease, particularly the dangerous phenomenon of sudden, sharp increases in blood pressure. Originating from the laboratory of Professor Katia Bertoldi, this project is spearheaded by postdoctoral students Adel Djellouli and Giovanni Bordiga.
Their work centers on developing a novel device described as a soft, stent-like structure. Unlike traditional rigid medical implants, the emphasis here is on flexibility and adaptability. The technology is specifically engineered to help regulate dangerous spikes in blood pressure, offering a potentially less invasive or more effective method than current treatments to manage this life-threatening condition. The support from the Grid Accelerator will be instrumental in moving this promising medical technology closer to clinical application and potential market adoption.
Addressing the AI Data Explosion
The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence capabilities is fundamentally reliant on the ability to process vast amounts of data with increasing speed and efficiency. A second project selected for the 2025 Grid Accelerator cohort directly addresses this challenge, stemming from the lab of Professor Kiyoul Yang.
Led by postdoctoral student Tianyi Zeng, this research is focused on creating an integrated chip-scale optical circuit switch and amplifier. The core innovation lies in developing components that can manage and boost optical data signals on a single chip, promising significant improvements over existing electronic methods. This technology is specifically intended to increase the speed and efficiency of AI data centers, which are currently grappling with unprecedented data traffic and energy consumption. By accelerating data flow and reducing energy needs, this innovation could be crucial for the continued advancement and sustainability of artificial intelligence.
Advancing Quantum Computing
The third project receiving support from the Harvard Grid Accelerator is poised to tackle one of the most complex and potentially transformative technological frontiers: quantum computation. While the specific details of the underlying technology were not immediately available, the project’s stated aim is ambitious: unlocking scalable quantum processing.
Scalability remains a significant hurdle in realizing the full potential of quantum computers, which promise to solve problems currently intractable for even the most powerful supercomputers. This project’s inclusion highlights the Grid Accelerator’s recognition of the long-term, high-impact potential of quantum technologies and its commitment to supporting foundational research that could lead to significant breakthroughs in this field.
Future Outlook
The selection of these three projects for the 2025 Harvard Grid Accelerator program underscores the university’s strategic approach to innovation. By identifying and nurturing technologies with direct relevance to urgent societal challenges – from health crises to the infrastructure demands of emerging technologies like AI and quantum computing – Harvard aims to ensure that academic discoveries translate into tangible benefits for the world.
The support provided by the accelerator, leveraging the experience of the Grid/OTD model, will provide these research teams with the resources and expertise needed to navigate the complex path from laboratory prototype to market-ready product. The success stories of the 19 startups launched and the nearly half a billion dollars raised by past projects serve as a powerful testament to the program’s ability to foster innovation and generate significant economic and societal value from cutting-edge research.