DexMat does not sound like a materials company until you realize materials quietly decide who wins decades later. Based in Houston, Texas, DexMat was born from Rice University science that refused to stay academic. The work traces back to Nobel laureate Richard Smalley asking a dangerous question in 2000 about wet spinning carbon nanotubes, and to Matteo Pasquali carrying that work forward after 2005 with the patience of someone who knew the clock was on his side. By 2013, aligned nanotube fibers with metal grade conductivity stopped being theory. By 2015, DexMat existed to make it real.
The product is Galvorn, and the name fits. This is carbon that conducts like copper, weighs a fraction of it, bends without fatigue, and keeps its strength when everything else gives up. Galvorn runs as fiber, yarn, film, textile, and composite. It is seven times lighter than copper, stronger than steel per mass, and built for applications where wires move, twist, and survive. Aerospace, grid infrastructure, automotive, defense, and electronics are not shopping for miracles. They are shopping for reliability that does not punish weight, cost, or carbon.
On January 28, 2026, DexMat closed over five million dollars in Seed Round 2, led by non sibi ventures with Kent Lucas leaning in early. Governance Partners, Tailwind Futures, BetterWay, Capital Factory, and returning believers joined. Total equity now sits at ten million dollars, paired with three million in fresh non dilutive funding. More quietly impressive is the twenty million plus DexMat has pulled from DOE, ARPA E, NASA, NSF, and the Air Force. That is not hype money. That is execution money.
Bryan Guido Hassin stepped in as Chief Executive Officer in 2023, bringing scale muscle from Third Derivative and a habit of turning systems into businesses. Dmitri Tsentalovich shifted from Chief Executive Officer to Chief Technology Officer to keep the tech honest and moving. Matteo Pasquali remains the scientific backbone, still steering the physics that matter. In 2025, the company delivered 2.5x revenue and production growth, cut costs by 99.6 percent since founding, and scaled production three thousand times without losing material integrity.
Customers are already stress testing the future. NASA, Apple, Bosch, and Toyota are working under confidentiality. Four major power cable manufacturers are testing Galvorn for grid scale transmission. A Tier 1 automotive supplier is in advanced talks on a multi year, multi million dollar offtake for thermoelectric generators inside a 1.4 billion dollar market. Copper is heavy. Copper is scarce. Galvorn does not argue. It performs.
DexMat is not loud about where this goes next, and that restraint is the tell. When a material moves from lab curiosity to industrial spine, the real noise comes later, from factories, vehicles, grids, and balance sheets that suddenly feel lighter. This story is still spinning, still drawing out, still aligning, and the smartest move right now is paying attention before it looks obvious.

