Skip to content Skip to footer
Article

AGH University part of a consortium developing EU Chips Design Platform

Image of a chip being placed on a white, yellow-lit surface

AGH University part of a consortium developing EU Chips Design Platform

Coordinated by imec, a consortium of 12 European partners, including the AGH University, has been selected in the framework of the European Chips Act to develop the EU Chips Design Platform. Funded by Chips Joint Undertaking (Chips JU), the platform will facilitate access to advanced semiconductor design infrastructure, training, and capital for fabless semiconductor start-ups, small and medium enterprises and research organizations. By providing the necessary resources, the initiative aims to democratize and foster semiconductor innovation across Europe, specifically for chip design.

The semiconductor industry is the backbone of modern technology, powering everything from smartphones to advanced medical devices. With the EU Chips Act, Europe is dedicated to increasing its global semiconductor market share. Next to the launch of European pilot lines that aim to develop key technologies for semiconductor innovation, the EU Chips Act has proposed the EU Chips Design Platform as a vehicle to support the growth of fabless chip companies in Europe.

The EU Chips Design Platform will enable fabless companies to access the resources they need quickly and efficiently via a cloud-based virtual environment, offering chip design resources, training, and capital. Coordinated by imec, twelve key European research players in the semiconductor ecosystem have joined forces in a consortium to create this design platform.

The platform aims to onboard the first start-ups and small and medium enterprises by early 2026, providing them with low-barrier access to European design capabilities, including route-to-chip fabrication, packaging, and testing. It will offer customized support to access commercial electronic design automation (EDA) tools, intellectual property (IP) libraries, EU Chips Act pilot line technologies, and access to design IP repositories, including open-source options. Additionally, the platform will feature a start-up support program with incubation, acceleration, and mentoring activities next to financial assistance to help early-stage companies turn their innovative ideas into reality.

“The EU Chips Design Platform will provide crucial resources for start-ups and SMEs to accelerate their design journey and bring their business ideas to market faster. By reducing the barriers to access of design expertise, including EDA tools and IP, and drastically lowering chip design and fabrication costs and time-to-market, we will spark the growth of the European chip design industry,” stated Romano Hoofman, imec project coordinator.

As one of the European Chips Design Platform consortium members, what the AGH University brings to the table are years of experience in designing analogue, digital, and mixed chips. The project will be carried out by the Microelectronics Group at the Department of Metrology and Electronics of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics, Computer Science, and Biomedical Engineering. The AGH University of Krakow will play a key role in the development and operation of a complex training ecosystem and the platform’s user support. Based on 30 years of experience in designing ASIC chips, EDA tools, and cooperation with the industry, the AGH University will be responsible for the preparation of specialist trainings and educational materials on chips design, supporting the development of innovative fabless firms in Europe.

Members of the Microelectronics Group have many years of experience in chips design. Many integrated circuits designed with their participation have found applications in cutting-edge scientific experiments (LHC at CERN, INFN, neuroscience laboratories in the USA and others) and commercial applications in Europe and Japan. The group's research activity is mainly focused on the development of multi-channel readout circuits for neuroscience, X-ray imaging, high-energy physics applications and, in recent years, RF projects.

In 2014, the group has initiated a new field of study called Microelectronics in Industry and Medicine at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics, Computer Science, and Biomedical Engineering dedicated for students who want to specialise in specialist chips design.

The Platform Coordination Team of the EU Chips Design Platform consists of imec (Belgium), the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA, France), Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft zur Förderung der angewandten Forschung e. V. (Germany), Leibniz Institute for High Performance Microelectronics (IHP, Germany), Silicon Austria Labs (Austria), Fondazione Chips-IT (Italy), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC, Spain), International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory (Portugal), Eindhoven University of Technology (The Netherlands), Tampere University (Finland), CVUT (Czech Republic) and AGH University of Krakow (Poland). The grant agreement with the Chips JU, through the European Union’s Digital Europe program, is ongoing and will be signed later this year. The project will run from 2025 until the end of 2028.

Follow the European Chips Design Platform LinkedIn page for more updates.

Representatives of the twelve consortium members gathered at the International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory in Braga, Portugal.

Image of a large group of people standing on stairs, wearing orange lanyards

***

About imec
Imec is a world-leading research and innovation center in nanoelectronics and digital technologies. Imec leverages its state-of-the-art R&D infrastructure and its team of more than 6,000 employees and top researchers, for R&D in advanced semiconductor and system scaling, silicon photonics, artificial intelligence, beyond 5G communications and sensing technologies, and in application domains such as health and life sciences, mobility, industry 4.0, agrofood, smart cities, sustainable energy, education, etc. Imec unites world-industry leaders across the semiconductor value chain, Flanders-based and international tech, pharma, medical and ICT companies, start-ups, and academia and knowledge centers. Imec is headquartered in Leuven (Belgium), and has research sites across Belgium, in the Netherlands, the UK and the USA, and representation in 3 continents. In 2023, imec's revenue totaled 941 million euro.

Further information on imec can be found at www.imec-int.com.

Stopka