Katja Loos to lead nanomaterials research programme

University of Groningen Professor of Polymer Chemistry Katja Loos is the main applicant for NanoFun (Nanostructured Self-Assembled Functional Materials ), a research project in which universities and industry will collaborate to improve existing materials and techniques at the nanoscale. Self-assembly could generate better car tyres or steel types, and it could also improve microchip production.
The programme, which will be coordinated by the Materials Innovation Institute (M2i), has been awarded funding from NWO Chemical Sciences. With EUR one million from the six industrial partners, this will mean total funds of EUR 2.25 million. Over the next five years PhD students and postdocs will work on such projects as reducing the rolling resistance of car tyres by incorporating silicon particles into the rubber, using polymers to modify the surface of steel and reducing the patterns on the silicon discs used to produce silicon chips. Alongside the University of Groningen, the four Dutch technical universities are involved in the programme, as are six companies: ASM, Philips SCIL, Continental, Tata Steel, Surfix and DSM.
Self-assembly
‘What links the projects is self-assembly’, Loos explains. This makes it possible to add something to existing products or processes at the nanoscale. The different partners work with different materials, but there is some overlap. Wageningen University works with polymers for coating steel, for instance, while Loos uses other polymers to improve the production of microchips. ‘The idea is to learn from each other, so there will be joint workshops to make sure that we do.’
Two postdocs will join Katja Loos’s group for two years to work on the project, and a further three PhD students and three postdocs will work for the partners. M2i will manage the project.
NanoFun
NanoFun has received funding through the NWO Chemical Industrial Partnership Programme (CHIPP) for public-private partnerships involving at least one company and two knowledge institutions. NWO provides 50% of the funding for projects and industry the other 50%.
Last modified: | 04 December 2020 2.14 p.m. |
More news
-
03 April 2025
IMChip and MimeCure in top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition
Prof. Tamalika Banerjee’s startup IMChip and Prof. Erik Frijlink and Dr. Luke van der Koog’s startup MimeCure have made it into the top 10 of the national Academic Startup Competition.
-
01 April 2025
NSC’s electoral reform plan may have unwanted consequences
The new voting system, proposed by minister Uitermark, could jeopardize the fundamental principle of proportional representation, says Davide Grossi, Professor of Collective Decision Making and Computation at the University of Groningen
-
01 April 2025
'Diversity leads to better science'
In addition to her biological research on ageing, Hannah Dugdale also studies disparities relating to diversity in science. Thanks to the latter, she is one of the two 2024 laureates of the Athena Award, an NWO prize for successful and inspiring...