SciTransfer
Organization

TTI-TECHNOLOGIE-TRANSFER-INITIATIVEGMBH AN DER UNIVERSITAT STUTTGART

Stuttgart-based technology transfer SME specializing in quantum sensing and IoT monitoring systems, bridging university research and commercial application.

Technology SMEmultidisciplinaryDESMENo active H2020 projects
H2020 projects
4
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
€798K
Unique partners
96
What they do

Their core work

TTI GmbH is a technology transfer company affiliated with the University of Stuttgart, specializing in bridging academic research and commercial application. Their core work centers on sensor technologies and monitoring systems — from quantum-level diamond sensing to IoT-based environmental monitoring for cultural heritage preservation. As an SME embedded in a major technical university ecosystem, they translate lab-stage innovations into market-ready products and services, particularly in precision measurement and smart monitoring.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

Quantum sensing and diamond-based sensorsprimary
2 projects

Participated in both QuSCo (quantum-enhanced sensing via quantum control) and ASTERIQS (diamond quantum sensing using NV centres).

IoT-based monitoring and preventive conservationprimary
1 project

SensMat project focused on IoT micro-climate monitoring and multiscale modelling for cultural heritage preservation, their largest single grant (EUR 287,120).

1 project

Participated in CONNECTING Nature, contributing to transdisciplinary approaches for urban community transitions.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Urban sustainability and nature-based solutions
Recent focus
Quantum sensing and IoT monitoring

TTI's early H2020 involvement (2017) included broader urban sustainability topics like nature-based solutions and city governance through CONNECTING Nature. By 2018-2019, their focus sharpened significantly toward precision sensing technologies — quantum diamond sensors (ASTERIQS) and IoT-based preventive monitoring (SensMat). This trajectory shows a clear consolidation from general technology transfer toward specialized sensor and monitoring expertise.

TTI is converging on sensor technologies for real-world monitoring applications, combining quantum-level measurement capabilities with IoT deployment — expect future work at this intersection.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: specialist_contributorReach: European28 countries collaborated

TTI operates exclusively as a consortium participant, never as coordinator, which is typical for a technology transfer SME that contributes specialized commercialization and application expertise rather than driving the research agenda. With 96 unique partners across 28 countries in just 4 projects, they engage in large, diverse consortia — indicating comfort operating in complex multi-partner environments. Their role likely centers on exploitation planning, prototyping, and market validation within these large teams.

Despite only 4 projects, TTI has built an extensive network of 96 unique partners spanning 28 countries, reflecting their participation in large Innovation Action and Research consortia. Their network is pan-European with no visible geographic concentration beyond their Stuttgart base.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

TTI occupies a rare niche as a university-affiliated technology transfer SME that bridges quantum physics research and practical monitoring applications. Their combination of deep ties to the University of Stuttgart's research ecosystem with commercial agility makes them an ideal partner for projects needing to demonstrate market pathways for lab-stage sensor technologies. For consortium builders, they bring both academic credibility and private-sector pragmatism to exploitation and dissemination.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • ASTERIQS
    A major diamond quantum sensing project bringing together NV-centre physics with practical applications like NMR and magnetic field measurement — their clearest technology specialization.
  • SensMat
    Their largest grant (EUR 287,120) combining IoT sensor networks with cultural heritage preservation — demonstrates their ability to apply monitoring tech in non-obvious domains.
Cross-sector capabilities
digitalenvironmentmanufacturingsociety
Analysis note: With only 4 projects and no coordinator roles, the profile is based on limited data. The diverse topic range (urban solutions, quantum physics, cultural heritage) may reflect TTI acting as a flexible technology transfer vehicle for different University of Stuttgart research groups rather than having a single deep specialization. The website domain (smartmote.de) suggests a product focus on smart monitoring that would unify the quantum sensing and IoT conservation threads, but this cannot be confirmed from CORDIS data alone.