Michel Laberge is a Canadian physicist and entrepreneur.[2][3] He is the founder and CSO of General Fusion, and was previously a senior physicist and principal engineer at Creo Products for nine years.[4][2]
During his time at Creo Products, Dr. Laberge developed digital laser technologies for industrial laser printers. In the 1990s, his role as senior physicist and principal engineer involved aligning laser diodes to mitigate the effects of microbanding - a printing artifact that results in unwanted parallel stripes. Later, Laberge supervised a team of five engineers to develop a digital micromirror device for the booming telecom industry. The team produced a device in six months that outperformed the market competition, but the project was terminated due to lack of investment as a result of the telecoms crash.[1]
After his work at Creo, Dr. Laberge founded General Fusion in an effort to demonstrate the feasibility of magnetized target fusion as a commercial energy source. Initially, Dr. Laberge worked alone in a converted gas-station garage in British Columbia to develop a proof of concept prototype reactor. The company has since secured funding and has expanded to larger facilities, where 65 people were employed as of 2017.[6]
Patents
Dr. Laberge holds several patents in the United States and Canada, primarily related to optics and fusion applications.
US 5305091 Optical coordinate measuring system for large objects
US 5818498 Method of multi-channel thermal recording