Company: QuantumCore Materials Inc. (private, Delaware C-Corp)
Founded: 2023 | HQ: Austin, TX | Employees: ~42
Stage: Series B (raising now) | Last Round: $12M Series A (closed Q4 2025)
QuantumCore Materials has been operating in near-total stealth for the past two years, but the Austin-based battery startup is finally starting to make noise in deep tech VC circles. The company recently emerged from stealth to announce that it has filed a provisional patent application for what it describes as a "novel solid-electrolyte composite architecture enabling room-temperature lithium-metal anode operation with dendrite suppression."
In plain English: they claim to have solved one of the biggest problems in battery technology — how to use lithium metal anodes (which store far more energy than conventional graphite anodes) without the dangerous dendrite formations that cause batteries to short-circuit and catch fire.
The Technology
The company's core innovation is a layered solid electrolyte using a proprietary ceramic-polymer composite they call "QCMatrix." According to materials shared with investors during the Series A roadshow, QCMatrix achieves ionic conductivity of 4.2 mS/cm at room temperature — comparable to liquid electrolytes — while maintaining mechanical strength sufficient to suppress dendrite penetration through 500+ charge cycles in internal lab testing.
If these numbers hold up in independent validation, it would be a significant advancement. Current solid-state battery leaders like QuantumScape and Solid Power have struggled to achieve reliable room-temperature performance at scale.
The Fundraise
Key investment thesis from insiders: QuantumCore's patent-pending technology, if validated, positions the company as a potential acquisition target for major battery manufacturers or EV companies. At a reported $45M pre-money valuation for the Series B, early investors see significant upside — comparable companies with less mature technology have raised at $200M+ valuations.
CEO Dr. Rajesh Patel told us in a phone interview: "We closed our Series A in November with strong institutional support. We're now in active conversations with three Fortune 500 companies about strategic partnerships — two in automotive and one in consumer electronics. We expect to announce at least one definitive agreement by Q3 2026, which is why we're raising the B now to scale our pilot production line."
Patel declined to name the Fortune 500 partners, citing active NDAs, but said the company has received term sheets from "multiple top-tier VC firms" for the Series B round.
Funding History
| Round | Amount | Date | Lead Investor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-seed | $1.5M | Q2 2023 | Founders + angels |
| Seed | $3.8M | Q1 2024 | Undisclosed (deep tech fund) |
| Series A | $12M | Q4 2025 | Undisclosed (climate-focused VC) |
| Series B | $30–40M (target) | Raising now | TBD |
How the Technology Compares
| Company | Stage | Last Valuation | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| QuantumScape | Public (NYSE: QS) | $4.8B mkt cap | Pre-commercial, prototype cells |
| Solid Power | Public (NASDAQ: SLDP) | $680M mkt cap | Pre-commercial, A-sample cells |
| Factorial Energy | Private | $3.3B (Series D) | Pre-commercial, JV with Stellantis |
| QuantumCore Materials | Private | $45M pre-B (reported) | Lab-validated, pilot line planned |
Even applying a 99% discount to QuantumScape's public market valuation to account for QuantumCore's earlier stage would imply a $48M valuation — roughly in line with the reported Series B pre-money. But if the technology validates in third-party testing, the gap could close dramatically.
Accredited Investor Access
QuantumCore is allocating a portion of its Series B round for accredited individual investors through a Regulation D offering. Minimum investment is reportedly $25,000. The company is not using a public crowdfunding platform — allocation is handled directly through its legal counsel and requires standard accredited investor verification.
Several members of a private deep tech investor community we follow have reported receiving allocation offers after expressing interest through the company's investor relations page.
Risks
This is a high-risk, early-stage private investment:
- Pre-revenue company with ongoing R&D burn
- Patent is still provisional — final grant is not guaranteed
- Performance claims are based on internal lab data, not yet independently validated
- Private company with no public financial disclosures
- Illiquid investment — no secondary market for shares
- Solid-state battery space is highly competitive with well-funded incumbents