ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Research funding to develop energy-efficient computing and early diagnostics of corneal diseases

The funding granted by the Technology Industries of Finland Centennial Foundation for two Aalto projects totals nearly 1.3 million euros - the projects are investigating a completely new technology to reduce waste heat from computers, as well as more efficient methods for early and non-invasive detection of corneal diseases in the eye
On the background, white radiant lines over a black bacground and only hair and shoulder of a person passing by visible

The Technology Industries of Finland Centennial Foundation has granted funding totalling nearly 1.3 million euros to two research projects at Aalto University. Through the Future Makers funding programme, the Foundation funds ambitious research that will renew Finnish industry and society.

The funded Aalto University projects are investigating a completely new technology to reduce waste heat from computers, as well as more efficient methods for early and non-invasive detection of corneal diseases in the eye.

Non-thermal optical control of spin waves for energy efficient computing

Professors Sebastiaan van Dijken and Päivi Törmä lead the project that explores a transformative approach to computing that could greatly reduce the ICT sector’s substantial energy footprint. The researchers aim to offer low-power, wave-based computing alternatives that have the potential to drive new technology industries and job creation in computing, sensing, and communication.

The project investigates a cutting-edge technology based on magnetic waves, or spin waves. These waves travel through magnetic materials and enable information processing without the level of heat generation that is unavoidable in traditional electronics.

The team has recently learned how to control spin waves at speeds 100000 times faster than previous methods. Currently this approach relies on thermoplastic heating; now, the researchers aim for a more advanced technique that is based on a direct coupling between spin waves and plasmon modes. The non-thermal generation of magnetic fields could lead to ultrafast, localized spin-wave manipulation without harmful heating, and thus efficient data processing. It would also eliminate the need for constant data transfer between processing and memory units

Diffractive optical elements in THz spectroscopy for early non-contact detection of corneal diseases

Professor Zachary Taylor and the CorneaSense research team are utilizing diffractive optical elements to enhance and thus increase early detection sensitivity and improve management of corneal diseases in the eye. The team aims to integrate corneal diagnostic technologies with advanced optical engineering techniques.

Many corneal diseases are associated with changes in the water content of the cornea, which are difficult to detect early enough. Researchers are trying to find out how to detect changes in corneal water content more accurately and earlier than with current methods. The research is crucial as early detection of corneal water content changes can significantly improve patient outcomes, which is currently hindered by the lack of sufficiently sensitive diagnostic technology. 

So far, the team has pioneered non-contact, non-invasive methods for quantifying corneal water content through terahertz (THz) spectroscopy, adapting remote sensing technology for corneal tissue measurement. Promising detection results have been obtained in the laboratory – next, the researchers aim to design diffractive optical elements to optimally shape the THz beam to human corneas thus obtaining data of the tissue properties.

Read more (> release on the page, in Finnish)

Get to know our research

Päivi Törmä ja Sebastiaan van Dijken

Guiding spin waves with light could lead to faster and much more energy efficient computing

Major new research project at Aalto University aims to develop new type of computing device that eliminates massive amounts of waste heat produced by current devices

News
Close up of a human eye

Corneasense

Diagnostic technology for accurate assessment and improved management of corneal health.

Innovation portfolio
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A woman in white stands in a theatrical dressing room with violet walls, a lit vanity mirror, and hanging clothes.
Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

Hämeenlinna Art Museum’s exhibition brings artworks to life through film

Hämeenlinna Art Museum will open a new exhibition Kehyskertomuksia: 24 fps / Reframing Cinema, produced in collaboration with the Aalto University Department of Film ELO.
Left: Daniela da Silva Fernandes, right: Robin Welsch.
Press releases Published:

AI use makes us overestimate our cognitive performance

New research warns we shouldn’t blindly trust Large Language Models with logical reasoning –– stopping at one prompt limits ChatGPT’s usefulness more than users realise.
Open Access Week 2025 poster with nine images behind the open access symbol and event details.
Research & Art Published:

Publishing Research Data Alongside Research Articles

Data availability statements are increasingly required by scientific journals. They include information on what data are available, where they can be found, and any applicable access terms
Six white faces surround a central purple face with a smiling expression on a yellow background.
Press releases Published:

Researcher cracks new ‘kissing number’ bounds — besting AI in the process

researcher found three new bounds for the famous mathematical ‘kissing number’ dilemma