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HomeTechnologyTeradar raises $150M for a sensor it says beats lidar and radar

Teradar raises $150M for a sensor it says beats lidar and radar


Matt Carey, the co-founder and CEO of Boston-based startup Teradar loves when people tell him: โ€œI donโ€™t believe you.โ€

Thatโ€™s โ€œright where we want folks,โ€ he recently told TechCrunch.

Carey has spent the last few years quietly building a solid-state sensor that sees the world using the terahertz band of the electromagnetic spectrum, which sits between microwaves and infrared. It essentially combines the best traits of radar sensors โ€” like no moving parts and the ability to pierce rain or fog โ€” with the higher definition afforded by laser-based lidar sensors.

Itโ€™s a product thatโ€™s never been done at this scale before, so people are understandably skeptical when Carey explains his work. A long-range, high-resolution sensor thatโ€™s also affordable? It just sounds too good to be true.

Itโ€™s usually at this point that Carey gives them a demo, like at this past yearโ€™s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. There was Carey, outside the Westgate hotel, aiming an early version of the Teradar sensor at crowds of people as reps from some of the biggest automakers watched it parse the scene in real time.

โ€œThey almost didnโ€™t believe it until they got to play with it,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™ve never raised money without, like, spending a lot of time in a demo of people trying to break it. And thatโ€™s how it should be, right?โ€

Careyโ€™s demos โ€” and the tech itself โ€” helped him lock down a $150 million Series B funding round from investors like Capricorn Investment Group, Lockheed Martinโ€™s venture arm, mobility-focused firm IBEX Investors, and VXI Capital, a new defense-focused fund led by the former CTO of the U.S. militaryโ€™s Defense Innovation Unit.

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Teradar claims to already be working with five top automakers from the U.S. and Europe to validate the tech, and expects to win a contract to put the companyโ€™s sensors in a 2028-model vehicle โ€” meaning it will need to be ready to go in 2027. Teradar is also working with three Tier 1 suppliers, which he said the company will lean on for manufacturing.

The near-term goal for Teradar is for automakers to use its sensors to power advanced driver assistance and even self-driving systems. The โ€œmodular terahertz engine,โ€ as the sensor is officially known, can be customized to fit any of those applications, and Carey said the price will fall somewhere between a radar and a lidar. (Think a few hundred dollars, not a few thousand.)

โ€œHow do we get the sensor on every single vehicle? I drive a Ford Focus, and thereโ€™s zero chance youโ€™re putting a $1,000 lidarโ€ on that, Carey said.

Carey said he was inspired to start Teradar after a friend of his died in a car crash.

โ€œIt was one of those weird corner cases where, between the sun, and the fog, it couldnโ€™t have been solved by any existing sensor,โ€ he said. In a situation like that, where thereโ€™s lots of glare, cameras typically struggle. Lidar would also be challenged because of the fog. And radar can only help so much with its typically-lower resolution.

Carey had already been in talks to go work for an automaker, and was thinking about autonomous vehicle tech. In 2021, he started talking to his co-worker Gregory Charvat, the CTO of spatial sensor and intelligence company Humatics, about this apparent problem.

โ€œ[Charvat] was like, โ€˜you know, Iโ€™ve always wanted to be able to image at terahertz,โ€™โ€ Carey said. Shortly after, they started Teradar, with MITโ€™s The Engine nonprofit incubator leading its seed round.

There could be other applications for Teradarโ€™s sensor, like in the defense sector. Thereโ€™s clearly interest there based on who on the companyโ€™s cap table. For now, Carey said the company is almost entirely focused on the automotive business.

Carey admits heโ€™s not the first to try to leverage the terahertz part of the spectrum; thereโ€™s been a litany of academic research, and some attempts to commercialize the tech before. But a lot of that has been focused around industrial or security applications.

He said recent advancements in the silicon industry combined with a focused team of experts โ€” including his third co-founder Nick Saiz, who Carey boasted is โ€œthe worldโ€™s best terahertz chip designer, bar noneโ€ โ€” has allowed them to move quickly and woo big automakers.

That doesnโ€™t mean itโ€™s been easy, though.

โ€œItโ€™s very difficult to get their attention, itโ€™s very difficult to get their dollars, and itโ€™s very difficult to get their test track time,โ€ he said. โ€œThe fact that theyโ€™ve unlocked all of those things for us means a big deal.โ€

In other words: now they believe him.



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