Kabel und Lichter

Access to high-performance computing for businesses

Helmholtz invests €18 million in AI innovation ecosystems: Nine Helmholtz centers open their High-Performance Computing infrastructure to companies and connect businesses with their AI experts. More than €2 million will go to the Max Delbrück Center.

To remain competitive in today's economy, the use of artificial intelligence (AI) has become essential for companies across almost all industries. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) as well as large corporations face challenges that they can only partially overcome on their own—such as securing the access to extensive datasets or high-performance computers (HPC). HPC Gateway, a new Helmholtz initiative, addresses exactly this: it opens access to the Helmholtz Association's world-leading HPC infrastructure for businesses and connects them with AI experts. The initiative particularly supports projects in the areas of AI, digital twins, and HPC-based innovations.

During the newly launched one-year pilot phase, nine Helmholtz centers at eight locations are opening their HPC infrastructure to businesses. HPC Gateway aims to foster closer collaboration between research institutions and companies, thereby promoting the development of regional innovation ecosystems in the long term. The goal is to gain a detailed understanding of the specific requirements businesses have for the use of AI and to develop long-term AI services. The process expertise that companies bring to the various projects plays a central role in the development of such services.

Strengthen Germany as a research hub

The participating Helmholtz Centers, including the Max Delbrück Center will provide companies with access to HPC infrastructure through cooperative projects. They will also advise them on how to address their research questions and how to prepare their data. In addition, companies will gain access to extensive datasets. AI consultants and IT managers, as well as scientific experts from the centers, will be available for consultation. Furthermore, a training and further education program for users from both academia and industry will ensure the effective use of HPC capacities and related AI methods long term. 

“With HPC Gateway, the Helmholtz Association is committed to making a much-needed and measurable contribution to the federal government's AI strategy,” says Professor Otmar D. Wiestler, President of the Helmholtz Association. “This initiative will future-proof numerous companies in the field of artificial intelligence. HPC Gateway has the potential to sustainably strengthen Germany as a hub for research and the economy in times of digital transformation.”

Collaborations with the Max Delbrück Center

Partners from academia and industry will come together through co-designed pilot projects that will take place at the locations of the nine Helmholtz Centers and their surrounding regions. These bilateral projects are co-financed by the participating companies. Together with the Max Delbrück Center in Berlin, companies are launching the following joint projects to develop AI technologies:

  • Together with Treamid, Dr. Altuna Akalin will work on an AI-assisted toolkit for drug development. It is intended to help establish mechanisms of action and new indications.
  • Together with Absea Biotechnolgy, Professor Nikolaus Rajewsky wants to advance cross-linking data analysis tools in mass spectrometry, integrating data from spatial proteomics and transcriptomics.
  • Professor Jana Wolf is collaborating with Bayer to apply machine learning approaches and deep learning derived solutions to model parametrization in oncology and inflammation.
  • Altuna Akalin and Voice e.V. will develop a customized chatbot for scientific organizations.
  • Deborah Schmidt collaborates with RadioEye to develop a system that enables radiologists to better retrieve multimodal image information. This will help them to diagnose eye and orbital mass lesions from MRI scans.
  • Together with OpenUC2, Schmidt aims to use AI and spatial biology technologies to advance the profiling of tissue biomarkers.
  • Together with Ruumi, she will develop a comprehensive AI model that integrates diverse data sources to accurately predict grassland biomass.

Roll-out on an even broader scale

HPC Gateway builds on the experience gained from predecessor projects, such as the Smart Data Innovation Lab (SDIL). SDIL is a nationwide network funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, where universities and non-university research institutions offer companies computing capacities, data cleanrooms, and consulting services in the field of AI. The goal of HPC Gateway is to roll out comparable offerings on an even broader scale and to assess which existing AI services can be integrated into the initiative. To achieve this, the Helmholtz Association collaborates closely with partners such as the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, with which similar initiatives have already been implemented, particularly at Forschungszentrum Jülich.

Helmholtz is investing a total of 18 million euros in HPC Gateway, supporting the following Helmholtz Association locations:

  • Forschungszentrum Jülich (North Rhine-Westphalia)
  • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Baden-Württemberg)
  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (Saxony)
  • GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung (Hesse)
  • Helmholtz Munich (Bavaria)
  • Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY (Hamburg)
  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon (Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony)
  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie (Berlin)
  • Max Delbrück Center (Berlin)

 

Further information

Press release of the Helmholtz Association