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Nanochip raises $14 million

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The company raises money to complete development of ultra high capacity removable data storage chips. Series C2 funding to support prototype development, design verification and sampling of removable chips for computer, server and consumer electronics markets.

Nanochip, a developer of micro electromechanical systems (MEMS) silicon data storage chips, announced the completion of a $14 million financing round. In conjunction with Intel Capital and JK&B Capital, both investors in earlier rounds, this round was led by an additional world classinvestment company. The financing round will allow Nanochip to complete development of its first prototypes later this year to support design verification testing and limited customer sampling in 2009.

Nanochip is developing a new class of ultra high capacity storage chips enabling the storage of tens of gigabytes (GB) of data per chip, or the equivalent of many high definition feature length videos. By coupling MEMS with nano probe array technology that far exceeds the expected limits of conventional lithography used in present semiconductor memory, these new chips are designed to meet the growing demand for cost effective, removable and rewritable data storage for use in a wide range of computing, server and consumer electronics products.

Nanochip's first products are expected to exceed 100 GB per chip set, reaching terabytes (TB) in the future, and at a substantially lower cost compared with flash memory solutions.

"Flash has become the technology of choice for a variety of consumer and business applications where cost effective, non volatile solid state storage is a must," said Keith Larson, vice president and director of manufacturing, memory and digital health sectors for Intel Capital. "However, as flash process technology scaling begins to approach its limits, Nanochip's technology is well positioned to provide memory capacity with exponentially higher storage densities at a cost per gigabyte significantly below that of flash technology. New memory components, such as Nanochip's, will enable new, innovative electronics devices and increase the performance of existing computing and other devices."

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