Vorbeck
Vorbeck is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Vorbeck.
Vorbeck is a company.
Key people at Vorbeck.
Key people at Vorbeck.
Vorbeck Materials is a materials science company specializing in graphene-based technologies, producing advanced materials like Vor-x® graphene, Vor-ink™ conductive inks, and printed electronics for extreme environments.[1][2][3][4] Founded in 2006 and headquartered in Jessup, Maryland, it serves defense, aerospace, manufacturing, and public safety sectors by solving challenges in conductivity, durability, and weight reduction—such as creating flexible circuits, high-performance antennas, EMI shielding, and PFAS-free firefighting foam.[1][2][3][4] With $21.04M raised and over 100 patents, Vorbeck enables applications like faster-charging lithium batteries, robust anti-theft packaging, and mission-critical communications harnesses, demonstrating steady growth through partnerships and capacity expansions.[1][2][3]
Vorbeck Materials was co-founded in 2006 by John Lettow (president and CEO), a Princeton Engineering graduate (class of 1995), alongside Princeton professors Ilhan Aksay and Robert Prud’homme, who invented the core graphene production technology.[3][5] The company licensed this proprietary process from Princeton University, which exfoliates graphite into single-atom-thick graphene sheets—harder than diamond, stronger than steel, and 13 times more conductive than copper—transforming academic research into commercial scalability.[3][5] Early milestones included launching Vor-ink for the Siren anti-theft device in 2011 (one of the first graphene products), facility expansions to 40+ tons annual capacity by 2013, and a 2013 licensing deal with Battelle for graphene-enhanced lithium batteries.[2] These steps marked Vorbeck's pivot from R&D to manufacturing, including plans for a 42,000 sq ft facility in Pocomoke City, MD.[2]
Vorbeck rides the graphene revolution in advanced materials, capitalizing on graphene's superlative properties to address U.S. supply chain vulnerabilities in critical minerals amid defense and green tech booms.[3] Timing aligns with rising demand for domestic alternatives to China-dominated graphite, as seen in its 2023 Graphite One partnership for Alaska-sourced feedstock, supporting national security in batteries, antennas, and composites.[3] Market forces like electrification (e.g., faster-charging Li-ion batteries), sustainability (PFAS-free foams), and extreme-environment tech (aerospace/defense) favor Vorbeck, influencing the ecosystem by pioneering scalable graphene commercialization—eclipsing costlier carbon nanotubes and enabling mesh networks for first responders.[2][3][5]
Vorbeck is poised for expansion through defense contracts, aerospace integrations, and sustainable materials, leveraging its U.S. graphite partnerships to scale production amid global decarbonization and reshoring trends.[3][4] Emerging trends like 6G communications, EV batteries, and PFAS regulations will amplify demand for its flexible, high-conductivity solutions, potentially evolving its role from niche innovator to key supplier in secure supply chains. As graphene matures commercially, Vorbeck's Princeton-rooted tech positions it to deliver immediate impact in extreme applications, building on two decades of pioneering printed electronics.[2][5]