NIST seeks proposals to establish new center of excellence on advanced materials research
28 June 2013
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has announced a competition (2013-NIST-ADV-MAT-COE-01) to create an Advanced Materials Center of Excellence to foster interdisciplinary collaborations between NIST researchers and scientists and engineers from academia and industry. The new center will focus on accelerating the discovery and development of advanced materials through innovations in measurement science and in new modeling, simulation, data and informatics tools. (Earlier post.)
NIST anticipates funding the new center at approximately $5 million per year for five years, with the possibility of renewing the award for an additional five years. Funding is subject to the availability of funds through NIST’s appropriations. The competition is open to accredited institutions of higher education and nonprofit organizations located in the United States and its territories. The proposing institution may work as part of a consortium that could include other academic institutions; nonprofit organizations; companies; or state, tribal or local governments.
Currently, the average time from laboratory discovery of a new material to its first commercial use can take up to 20 years. Reducing that lag by half is one of the primary goals of the administration’s Materials Genome Initiative, announced in 2011.
In many cases, the lengthy time for materials development is due to a repetitive process of trial and error experimentation that would be familiar to Thomas Edison, NIST notes. The Materials Genome Initiative and the new NIST center focus on significantly reducing this through the use of measurement and data-based research tools: massive materials databases, computer models and computer simulations.
The new center will provide a mechanism to merge NIST expertise and resources in materials science, materials characterization, reference data and standards with leading research capabilities in industry and academia for designing, producing and processing advanced materials.
NIST will offer a webinar presentation on the Advanced Materials Center of Excellence on 15 July 2013, at 2 p.m. Eastern time. The webinar will offer general guidance on preparing proposals and provide an opportunity to answer questions from the public about the program. Participation in the webinar is not required to apply. There is no cost for the webinar, but participants must register in advance. Information on, and registration for the webinar is available at www.nist.gov.
"Currently, the average time from laboratory discovery of a new material to its first commercial use can take up to 20 years. Reducing that lag by half is one of the primary goals of the administration’s Materials Genome Initiative, announced in 2011."
This could be be a better tax use than the NSA https://optin.stopwatching.us/
Posted by: kelly | 28 June 2013 at 11:40 AM