1 / 47

NSERC - NanoIP and the Canadian Perspective

NSERC - NanoIP and the Canadian Perspective. P. Grutter Physics, McGill University CIAR Nanoelectronics Program Scientific Director , NSERC NanoIP grutter@physics.mcgill.ca. Science Fiction:. 7of 9 on Star Trek. Field Ion Microscopy of tungsten tip . A. Schirmeisen, G. Cross,

frye
Télécharger la présentation

NSERC - NanoIP and the Canadian Perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NSERC - NanoIP and the Canadian Perspective P. Grutter Physics, McGill University CIAR Nanoelectronics Program Scientific Director, NSERC NanoIP grutter@physics.mcgill.ca

  2. Science Fiction: 7of 9 on Star Trek

  3. Field Ion Microscopy of tungsten tip A. Schirmeisen, G. Cross, A. Stalder, U. Durig P. Grutter Imaging at 5.0 kV

  4. Field Ion Microscopy of tungsten tip Imaging at 5.0 kV Manipulating at 6.0 kV

  5. Field Ion Microscopy of tungsten tip Imaging at 5.0 kV Manipulating at 6.0 kV

  6. Field Ion Microscopy of tungsten tip Imaging at 5.0 kV Manipulating at 6.0 kV

  7. Single atom on tungsten tip Imaged at 2.1 KV

  8. The Impact of Nano “If I were asked for an area of science and engineering that will most likely produce the breakthroughs of tomorrow, I would point to nanoscale science and engineering.” (…) Neal Lane, Assistant to former US President Clinton for science and technology “The total societal impact of nanotechnology is expected to be much greater than that of the silicon integrated circuit because it is applicable in many more fields than just electronics.”

  9. How big is a nanometer?

  10. nm

  11. Definition of Nanoscience 2. The properties are qualitatively different because l < lc Condition 2 distinguishes ‘nano’ from ‘micro’, macro-molecular chemistry’ or ‘biology’ Nanoscience and Nanotechnology investigates and applies phenomena, systems and structures where: 1. At least one dimension lc is a few nm

  12. Sub-micron is not nano! ‘Nanotechnology on silicon products: Intel leads in production and research’ (Wall Street Journal)

  13. Beware of PowerPoint Science or Cartoon Engineering !!!

  14. Where will nano make an impact? • Electronics and photonics • molecular electronics, spintronics • photonics • sensors • Materials • ultra-fine powders, composites • harder, more corrosion resistant, dirt/bacteria repellent • green manufacturing, cost effective • Bio-medical • emerging applications (materials, diagnostics, drug delivery...) • biomedical research tools (labeling, nanotools applied to biomed ) • biotechnology applied to nanoscience & technology

  15. New materials: non-permeable, self-cleaning, anti-septic,... Air-D-Fense(InMat, New Jersey): nanoclay/butyl thin film 3000 fold decreased permeability Lotus leaf (artificial): nm sized hydrophobic wax size: water rolls (not slides) -> cleans sol-gel based technique -> on market Self-cleaning plastic, textiles: CNT stabilized enzymes in polymer Textiles with ‘Stain Defender’ Ceramic Coatings: (Inframat) No barnacles on ship hulls: reduced drag

  16. Nano materials in labeling • High throughput multiplexed assays (‘nano bar code’) • Optical tracking on a cellular level with tagged CdSe quantum dots: which gene is active? Basis: size dependent emission color of ZnS capped CdSe nano particles

  17. Nano in Canada • No national strategy (yet) • National Institute of Nanotechnology (Edmonton): 120 M$ • $ 3.15 B Canadian Foundation of Innovation (10 years) • $ 900 M Canadian Research Chairs • NanoQuebec $ 10M operating (since 2001) • CIAR Nanoelectronics program (since 1999) • Many universities on a hiring spree (baby boomers retiring) • Cost structure relevant! 1 C$ = 2-3 US$

  18. National Science and Engineering Research Council People: support for more than 9,000 graduate students Discovery:funding of more than 8,700 researchers p.a. Innovation:encouraging more than 1,000 Canadian companies to invest in university research. In 2002-2003, NSERC will invest $678 million in university-based research and training in all the natural sciences and engineering.

  19. NSERC 2002 Total: $ 10,433k

  20. Newfoundland: $ 193k BC: $ 1,066k Sask.: $ 150k Nova Scotia: $ 244k Ontario: $ 4,501k New Brunswick: $ 40k Alberta: $ 812k Manitoba: $ 154k Quebec: $ 3,211k PEI: $ 63k NSERC 2002 Total: $ 10,433k

  21. BC: $ 1,066k Ontario: $ 4,501k Alberta: $ 812k Quebec: $ 3,211k NSERC 2002 Total: $ 10,433k

  22. 17 34 20 Materials 17 Life Sciences Electronics/Photonics Tools Nano Innovation Platform Submissions by Topic 8 9 3 2 24 38 2 2

  23. NSERC funding in 2002

  24. NSERC funding in 2002

  25. CFI Infrastructure funding Year # of Projects CFI Total 1998 5 0.7 M$ 1.8 M$ 1999 4 7.8 M$ 19.5 M$ 2000 14 17.4 M$ 43.5 M$ 2001 18 4.7 M$ 11.8 M$ 2002 20 27.4 M$ 68.5 M$ Total: 61 58.0 M$ 145.0 M$

  26. Nanotools Facility: 9.4 M$, part of NanoQuebec Network

  27. CFI Infrastructure and NSERC operating Year # of projects Accumulated TotalNSERC 1998 5 1.8 M$ 5.4 M$ 1999 4 21.3 M$ 7.2 M$ 2000 14 64.8 M$ 8.5 M$ 2001 18 76.6 M$ 8.8 M$ 2002 20 145.1 M$ 10.4 M$

  28. A few observations • Some world class nano research in Canada • Spread out over 6000 km • Current funding structure does not encourage risk taking • Researchers have grant writing fatigue • No strategic coordination or science policy • Commercialization a problem in Canada

  29. Canada is World Class in Nanoscience Patents as strength indicators:

  30. Canada is World Class in Nanoscience Patents as strength indicators: Marinova and McAleer, Nanotechnology 14, R1-R7 (2002) TS…Technological Specialization Index PS…Patent Share RAP…Rate of Assignment (=market share) CR…citation rate (=knowledge creation)

  31. Canada is World Class in Nanoscience Patents as strength indicators: Marinova and McAleer, Nanotechnology 14, R1-R7 (2002) TS…Technological Specialization Index PS…Patent Share RAP…Rate of Assignment (=market share) CR…citation rate (=knowledge creation)

  32. Canada is World Class in Nanoscience Patents as strength indicators: Marinova and McAleer, Nanotechnology 14, R1-R7 (2002) TS…Technological Specialization Index PS…Patent Share RAP…Rate of Assignment (=market share) CR…citation rate (=knowledge creation)

  33. NSERC Nano Innovation Platform: “The NSERC Nano Innovation Platform is a multidisciplinary national network of university researchers from many fields of science and engineering created to accelerate and intensify research and education of HQP in nanoscience and nanotechnology in Canada.”

  34. Organization of Nano IP • Scientific Director (P. Grutter) • Assoc. Scientific Director (M. Roseman) • Advisory Committee (9 members) • Admin. and other support staff • International Panel (6 members) • NSERC Steering Committee

  35. Aim of NSERC Nano IP • Develop and implement a national strategy together with all stake holders • Support a few high risk projects at a high funding level • Facilitate and build local nano communities • Increase NSERC budget with and for nano

  36. The Canadian Nano Vision: answers to the following questions • What is Canada’s position and strength in this field? • By the end of 2003 as a community of stakeholders we will have made some strategic choices both in terms of topics as well as where these efforts should geographicallybe concentrated. • We will also have a clearer understanding of what the required funding is andwhat it will be used for.

  37. Summary NanoIP • Nine high risk = high visibility projects: NSERC is doing something innovative and visionary in Nano • Workshops help build a community with students, researchers across all disciplines and sectors • Strategic coordination of Nano in Canada with all stake holders

  38. size solid state physics & engineering biology chemistry time now! Nano: Renaissance Scientists nm nm

  39. Nano Technology Nanotechnology is at its infancy, still rather quite primitive! • Science! • Scaling Laws? • Statistics? • Better function? • Throughput? some of the issues: • Cost? • Systems integration? • Environmental impact? • Social acceptance? • Ethics?

  40. NanoIP Awards: Philosophy • Excellence, quality, innovation and need for funds. • 'The risk taker is the best decision-maker.’ • Being first is important. • Is it ‘nano’ or a tool for nanoscience? • Minimize overhead/workload on applicant(s). • International refereeing committee. • For first round no selection based on strategic themes.

  41. NanoIP Awards: evaluation criteria • Is it 'Nano'? Or is it a new tool for nano research? • Excellence of proposal. • Originality. • Track record/potential of applicant(s). • Justification of why $100,000 will make an impact. • Reasonable to expect significant progress and impact with overall funding?

  42. CFI Infrastructure and NSERC operating Year # of Projects CFI TotalNSERC 1998 5 0.7 M$ 1.8 M$ 5.4 M$ 1999 4 7.8 M$ 19.5 M$ 7.2 M$ 2000 14 17.4 M$ 43.5 M$ 8.5 M$ 2001 18 4.7 M$ 11.8 M$ 8.8 M$ 2002 20 27.4 M$ 68.5 M$ 10.4 M$ Total: 61 58.0 M$ 145.0 M$

More Related