IVA’s 100 List - 2019-2024

Between 2019 and 2024, IVA’s 100 List was published annually to shine a spotlight on cutting‑edge research with the potential to create real value — whether through commercialisation, new business and methods, or positive societal impact. In 2026, an enhanced and updated version of the list will be launched.

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Model of a cargo ship with three sails

Wind-assisted ship propulsion for commercial vessels

Shipping handles 90% of world trade, contributing 3 % to global GHG emissions. We developed an innovative wind-assisted propulsion system for commercial vessels.

Circular economy
Chalmers University of Technology
2024
Crumpled metal scrap.

Advanced Multi-modal Perception System for Precision Autonomous Scrap Classification

The steel industry faces challenges in achieving circularity, primarily due to the complexity of scrap sorting.

Green & blue industries
Luleå University of Technology
2024
Picture of the process

Cavitating microbubbles as a next generation water cleaning technology

Global population growth, unequal distribution of water resources reinforced by climate change, and industrial development cause a sharp increase in freshwater demand. Cavitating microbubbles are a novel, ecologically and economically efficient, chemical-free approach to clean water from PFAS, bacteria, and pharmaceutical residues.

Green & blue industries
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024
Bubbles under water

Sverion: a paradigm shift in lubrication

By harnessing the chemical diversity of ions, Sverion provides superlative lubricants with unprecedented levels of flexible functionality and minimised environmental footprint.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024
LynxWorks website screenshot

Make Lynxwork - We support engineering companies to collaborate through their product data

We help industrial companies tackle the challenge of managing vast amounts of product data scattered across different software applications used during product development.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024
Fingertip

Microsperes for more efficient skincreams

Most skincare products fail to work as promised; only 1-5% of active ingredients penetrate the skin’s outer layer. This limits complex treatments like gene therapies or mRNA-based treatments for conditions such as eczema or skin aging, resulting in ineffective results and high costs.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024

Orb DB - Autocompleting Knowledge Responsibly

The Orb DB project adds predictive AI query capabilities to graph data with built-in confidence guarantees to deal with the demands of critical sectors such as healthcare, telecommunications, and urban planning.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024
AI connected to sustainable energy systems

Safe AI for enhanced sustainable energy systems

Clean energy transition is urgent, but today’s electrical grid cannot handle the high volatility of distributed energy resources, such as renewables (e.g., solar generation and wind power), electric vehicles and new loads (e.g., hydrogen, heat pump), leading to significant stability challenges.

Green & blue industries
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024
Electronic chip

Integration of atomically thin materials for future electronics

Microelectronics have transformed the lives of every person on the planet, since their invention in the 1950s. By the magic of miniaturization, every new generation of electronic chips dramatically outperformed its predecessor, bringing us inventions such as the Internet and AI.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024

Enabling same-shift antibiotic treatment for sepsis

Sepsis causes 20% of all deaths globally, affecting 5 million people yearly in the EU and US. While a patient can go from symptoms to death in <1 day, finding the infection-causing pathogen can take up to 7 days. The current procedure, blood culturing, requires bacteria to grow up to a million times to reach detection limits.

Deep tech
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
2024

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