Title: Centre for Materials Research: Past and Futures
1Centre for Materials Research Past and Futures
- Marshall Stoneham
- CMR meeting 14 March 2007
- file dotgtsciadmingtcmrgtcmroverview
2Initial Thoughts the 1995 sceneWhat possible
roles/structures were considered?
- A Materials Department?
- A mechanism for large equipment grants?
- A network to aid access to existing equipment?
- A network crossing traditional lines
- (a) to formulate novel grant applications,
- (b) to help create effective fixed centres
like LCN - A route to new teaching opportunities, e.g.,
M.Res Continuous Professional Development - A way to enhance visibility of UCL strengths
3Issues 1 Making Connections
- Research Links across UCL 20-25 units of
assessment included materials activities in the
last RAE. These ranged from basic work to
full-scale engineering. - Research Links across London LCN exists as a
working example, with Imperial College. QMW, KCL
and other London institutes would probably
welcome good ideas to collaborate. The Thomas
Young Centre (TYC) is attempting this. - International Research Links Many possible links,
notably with North America and the European Union
(the TYC is attempting this as well) - Research links can support teaching initiatives.
- Formulating national policies, e.g., Foresight
and the Materials Modelling initiatives of EPSRC
4Issues 2 Large resources
- New scientific or technical opportunities
- New opportunities can arise fast. They are often
interdisciplinary. - Good networks can make it easy to put teams
together. But there needs to be enough resource
(and enough uncommitted resource) to make things
happen. - Equipment or other major core feature
- If a Centre is to be more than the sum of its
components, it needs a core that is substantial
and (ideally) unique. Most materials departments
have large items of analytical equipment.
Research Councils favour large sets of kit (like
electron microscopes, for instance) at just a few
sites. - The scientific diversity of UCL is a strength
in all ways except one big kit often correlates
with very specific types of scientific programme.
Big kit is probably better based in centres like
the LCN
5Issues 3 The outside world
- Interactions with outside funding bodies Not
only Research Councils, but industry, the
European Union, government, and local government
bodies. I regularly arranged visits of the EPSRC
Materials managers. - External visibility Not just ego-trips, but
getting the right international recognition as a
means to better RAE and similar gradings.
Proposing people for prizes and Plenary/Invited
talks is important. - Established routes for funding to protect IPR
UCL does not have sufficient funds EPSRC refuses
to fund IPR protection - Capturing the student market Not just
undergraduates or Masters students, but also
Teaching Company, continuous professional
development, and so on. CAIS seems successful
with some of these routes. - Outreach Outreach is important to external
visibility we have probably not done enough.
6Summary of Issues 1
- Core scientific and technical platforms identify
broad areas where UCL should be the place leading
scientists worldwide want to know (and funding
bodies want to fund). These platforms will
evolve, so we should not be rigid. - Linking physical and biomedical. Routes such as
- (a) Walkabouts (CAIS does these)
- (b) The Derek Roberts informal meeting
- (c) The free wine at lunchtime solution
7Summary of Issues 2
- Even as a Centre for Materials Research, there
must be an educational role. This could emphasise
continuing professional development - Finance. The CMR should be able to influence
College support (a) to finance relationships
across UCL, (b) for modest exploratory projects,
and (c) to ensure that existing UCL organisation
doesnt get in the way (e.g., overheads issues
when an external organisation is prepared to fund
the major costs of positions).
8Possible models
- The Network component is crucial. UCL has a
splendidly cooperative culture. - In at least two materials areas UCL has unique
capability (leading edge worldwide) spanning UCL
materials research Materials Modelling and
Visualisation. These are examples of platforms - These two areas could constitute the core of CMR.
They share common ground and can be mutually
beneficial. - In addition, there should be a family of
affiliated initiatives that exploit the core.
These should span physical and biomedical
sciences - To what extent should we seek London Centre
status? LCN is a good example, also the Thomas
Young Centre
9Summary Simple Actions
- Informal meetings (e.g., wine for lunch)
- Grouped talks (say 2-3 talks in an afternoon)
- Small discussion meetings of interesting ideas
(the Derek Roberts solution) - Walkabouts visits to as many as possible of the
RAE units of assessment that have materials work
(cf. CAIS/Duncan Bull) - Identify and build on strong UCL science
platforms - Get EPSRC and other relevant Research Council /
OST or DTI managers to visit - Update the equipment list (e.g., from UCL
insurance)
10(No Transcript)
11Some of the options suggested
- Materials discovery (Des McMorrow) Novel
magnetic, electronic properties etc. Most of the
world follows the Japanese. We have the basis for
a Centre for Materials Discovery - Integrate with other initiatives (Paul McMillan)
Relate to the Materials Chemistry Centre (UCL
Chemistry, Chem Eng, Birkbeck Industrial
Materials Chemistry, with some space and
joint-use kit), including the Visualisation
Centre. - Umbrella for LCN new UCL/IC centres (Aeppli)
e.g., Materials Synthesis (encompassing
non-'nano' activities in chemistry and elsewhere)
or Materials Systems Modelling ( transcending
nanotech but could encompass its modelling needs
as well as those of other centres/departments
ranging from pharmacology to earth sciences. - Biomedical materials (Brown) with links across
London, and including modelling, measurement
(CAIS) and the LCN nano aspects. - Holistic approaches to materials, inspection and
modelling high-value systems, e.g., fission or
fusion reactors (Brennan) - Small scale, informal approaches to stimulate
radical developments
12Integration with other initiatives
- Relate to the Materials Chemistry Centre (UCL
Chemistry, Chem Eng, Birkbeck Industrial
Materials Chemistry, with some space and
joint-use kit), including the Visualisation
Centre. - Comment Visualisation could be one major core
component linking a wide (and evolving) range of
materials initiatives)
13Umbrella for LCN new UCL/IC centres (Gabriel
Aeppli)
- Examples 1 Materials Synthesis, encompassing
non-'nano' activities in chemistry and elsewhere - Example 2 Materials Systems Modelling,
transcending nanotech but could encompass its
modelling needs as well as those of other
centres/departments ranging from pharmacology to
earth sciences. - Comment Modelling should be at the core, linking
many projects. UCL has unique range and strength
in this area, including Peter Coveneys Centre
for Computational Science - Comment Modelling is much more than computer
power, and this is where UCL has special
strengths.
14Biomedical materials with links across London
(Robert Brown, AMS)
- Past discussions by AMS identified many common
areas, from the molecular scale through other
mesoscopic areas (minimal invasive dentistry)
including porous solids to engineering and novel
materials, e.g., interfaces and adhesives. - These should exploit our wide-ranging measurement
(CAIS) and modelling capabilities (LCN, including
nano aspects) - Robert Brown raises specifically the area of
protein-based bioartificial materials and the
fabrication of meso-scale biomimetic structures
(cf. Biomaterials Foresight 2004). - UCL has funding to set up a cross-college
Biomaterials Composites lab (now under
construction at the Eastman Dental Institute,
which has complementary interests in synthetic
polymer and glass biomaterials for tissue
engineering. - Pankaj Vadgama at QMW (the previous Biomaterials
IRC) appears to welcome collaboration.
15Materials discovery (Des McMorrow)
- Novel magnetic, electronic properties etc. Most
of the world follows the Japanese. We have the
basis for a Centre for Materials Discovery - Comment This might be just one of a number of
projects (maybe with international partners)
that could benefit from core platforms in
visualisation and modelling
16The energy crisis missing skills for the nuclear
industries (fission and fusion)(Feargal Brennan,
Tony Harker)
- It seems most unlikely that the Kyoto targets (or
even more serious ones) can be met without
nuclear. In the longer term, fusion will be
needed, especially for Asia. - There is a recognised international shortage in
people with the right skills. - One particular area for which UCL has special
expertise is the mix of materials, inspection and
monitoring to meet the novel challenges in an
holistic way. We have good links to both the
fission and fusion communities. - These themes are also ones that could underly a
UCL/ Imperial centre.
17The small scale, informal approaches How to
stimulate radical developments
- The Exploratory projects in the Nanotechnology
IRC give the right sort of scope - Right environment to tempt top younger scientists
with Royal Society, EPSRC and similar Fellows (to
compensate for the lack of college Junior
Research Fellowships) - Room to respond rapidly and effectively in
cross-disciplinary areas - Seed funding (say 20K) for research projects in
cases where confidentiality precludes many routes