CuspAI has $100 million Series A funding from New Enterprise Associates, Temasek, and other global backers, highlighting how generative AI in science is redefining the future of advanced industries, marking a major step for the Cambridge-based AI materials discovery startup.
Founded in 2024 by Dr Chad Edwards and Professor Max Welling, CuspAI has developed a platform that uses generative AI models, molecular simulations, and deep learning to speed up the creation of new materials. Unlike traditional discovery methods, the system enables researchers to specify desired properties and generate synthesizable candidates within days, rather than years.
This breakthrough positions CuspAI as a key innovator in AI materials discovery. The company has already secured partnerships with Hyundai on sustainable energy projects, Kemira on safer chemical alternatives, and Meta on carbon capture technology.
“Our platform acts like an AI ‘search engine’ for materials, enabling customers to specify the exact properties they need and generating new, synthesisable candidates up to 10x faster than traditional discovery methods,” the founders said in the announcement.
Strategic Investor Confidence
The $100 million Series A funding was co-led by New Enterprise Associates and Temasek, with participation from NVentures, Samsung Ventures, Hyundai Motor Group, and several notable angel investors. This backing reflects growing confidence in the use of generative AI in science and its potential to reshape global industries.
Investors view CuspAI as a platform capable of serving multiple markets, from automotive and semiconductors to water purification and climate technology. With demand for scalable solutions on the rise, the funding will enable the startup to expand in both the US and Asia.
Many industries require new materials, including automotive (batteries, lightweight components), semiconductors, coatings, filtration, climate tech, consumer goods, and chemicals. If a platform can serve across these sectors, the revenue potential is enormous. Because upstream R&D is so expensive and time-consuming, a faster and more reliable way to discover materials could be very valuable.
Why This Matters Globally
AI materials discovery is emerging as a critical driver of innovation. By cutting research cycles and reducing costs, CuspAI aims to accelerate breakthroughs that can support clean energy, sustainability, and high-performance technologies. The momentum from its Series A funding ensures the company can scale its platform and build stronger global collaborations.
Generative AI, large language models (LLMs), and improved molecular simulation are collectively entering a phase where their integration creates real advantages. The decreasing costs of computing (GPUs, cloud, etc.), better ML tools, and more open data make it possible to do things that weren’t feasible a few years ago. Investors who see that tailwind believe that companies that get ahead now can establish defensible positions.
As industries seek faster ways to meet climate goals and develop safer consumer products, generative AI in science will play an even bigger role in shaping the future of manufacturing, healthcare, and environmental solutions.
“We can only make real-world impact by continuing to iterate our platform, collaborating on meaningful use cases with industry, and delivering next-gen materials to market faster,” said Dr Chad Edwards.
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