
Stryker International
Stryker International
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:Waveoptics, Inphenix, HUBER+SUHNER Polatis Ltd, Plessey Semiconductors Ltd, Airbus Defence and Space +79 partnersWaveoptics,Inphenix,HUBER+SUHNER Polatis Ltd,Plessey Semiconductors Ltd,Airbus Defence and Space,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Cambridge Integrated Knowledge Centre,TeraView Limited,Anvil Semiconductors Ltd,Photon Design Ltd,British Telecommunications plc,UCL,Optalysys Ltd,Precision Acoustics Ltd,TREL,Xtera Communications Limited,VividQ,Zinwave,Phasor Solutions Ltd,Xtera Communications Limited,BAE Systems (UK),Huawei Technologies (UK) Co. Ltd,Pragmatic Semiconductor Limited,BAE Systems (Sweden),Oclaro Technology UK,PervasID Ltd,Oclaro Technology UK,Waveoptics,DSTL,FAZ Technology Limited,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,aXenic Ltd.,FAZ Technology Limited,Zilico Ltd,The Rockley Group UK,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Optalysys Ltd,Chromacity Ltd.,Continental Automotive GmbH,HUBER+SUHNER Polatis Ltd,Stryker International,Precision Acoustics (United Kingdom),British Telecom,Integer Holdings Corporation,Phasor Solutions Ltd,Microsoft Research Ltd,Xilinx NI Limited,Thales Group,Teraview Ltd,GE Aviation,Zilico Ltd,PervasID Ltd,Zinwave Ltd,VividQ,Thales Group (UK),Leonardo MW Ltd,aXenic Ltd.,Toshiba Research Europe Ltd,Anvil Semiconductors Ltd,BT Group (United Kingdom),CIP Technologies,Stryker International,Airbus (United Kingdom),MICROSOFT RESEARCH LIMITED,Airbus Defence and Space,Inphenix,PHOTON DESIGN LIMITED,Eight19 Ltd,PragmatIC Printing Ltd,Analog Devices,Huawei Technologies (UK) Co. Ltd,Eight19 Ltd,PLESSEY SEMICONDUCTORS LIMITED,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Chromacity Ltd.,Thales Aerospace,Teraview Ltd,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,Integer Holdings Corporation,Xilinx (Ireland),Continental Automotive GmbH,Analog Devices Inc (Global),The Rockley Group UK,Eblana Photonics (Ireland)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S022139/1Funder Contribution: 5,695,180 GBPThis proposal seeks funding to create a Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) in Connected Electronic and Photonic Systems (CEPS). Photonics has moved from a niche industry to being embedded in the majority of deployed systems, ranging from sensing, biophotonics and advanced manufacturing, through communications from the chip-to-chip to transcontinental scale, to display technologies, bringing higher resolution, lower power operation and enabling new ways of human-machine interaction. These advances have set the scene for a major change in commercialisation activity where electronics photonics and wireless converge in a wide range of information, sensing, communications, manufacturing and personal healthcare systems. Currently manufactured systems are realised by combining separately developed photonics, electronic and wireless components. This approach is labour intensive and requires many electrical interconnects as well as optical alignment on the micron scale. Devices are optimised separately and then brought together to meet systems specifications. Such an approach, although it has delivered remarkable results, not least the communications systems upon which the internet depends, limits the benefits that could come from systems-led design and the development of technologies for seamless integration of electronic photonics and wireless systems. To realise such connected systems requires researchers who have not only deep understanding of their specialist area, but also an excellent understanding across the fields of electronic photonics and wireless hardware and software. This proposal seeks to meet this important need, building upon the uniqueness and extent of the UCL and Cambridge research, where research activities are already focussing on higher levels of electronic, photonic and wireless integration; the convergence of wireless and optical communication systems; combined quantum and classical communication systems; the application of THz and optical low-latency connections in data centres; techniques for the low-cost roll-out of optical fibre to replace the copper network; the substitution of many conventional lighting products with photonic light sources and extensive application of photonics in medical diagnostics and personalised medicine. Many of these activities will increasingly rely on more advanced systems integration, and so the proposed CDT includes experts in electronic circuits, wireless systems and software. By drawing these complementary activities together, and building upon initial work towards this goal carried out within our previously funded CDT in Integrated Photonic and Electronic Systems, it is proposed to develop an advanced training programme to equip the next generation of very high calibre doctoral students with the required technical expertise, responsible innovation (RI), commercial and business skills to enable the £90 billion annual turnover UK electronics and photonics industry to create the closely integrated systems of the future. The CEPS CDT will provide a wide range of methods for learning for research students, well beyond that conventionally available, so that they can gain the required skills. In addition to conventional lectures and seminars, for example, there will be bespoke experimental coursework activities, reading clubs, roadmapping activities, responsible innovation (RI) studies, secondments to companies and other research laboratories and business planning courses. Connecting electronic and photonic systems is likely to expand the range of applications into which these technologies are deployed in other key sectors of the economy, such as industrial manufacturing, consumer electronics, data processing, defence, energy, engineering, security and medicine. As a result, a key feature of the CDT will be a developed awareness in its student cohorts of the breadth of opportunity available and the confidence that they can make strong impact thereon.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2025Partners:Stryker International, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, CTS Corporation, Intuitive Surgical Inc, University of Glasgow +19 partnersStryker International,NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde,CTS Corporation,Intuitive Surgical Inc,University of Glasgow,Thales Underwater Systems (replace),Dentsply Sirona,Dentsply Sirona,Sonic Systems Limited,Kuka Roboter GmbH,Kuka Roboter GmbH,Intuitive Surgical Inc,Stryker International,SICCAS,NHS GREATER GLASGOW AND CLYDE,Thales Underwater Systems,University of Glasgow,PZFlex Limited (UK),Active Needle Technology Ltd,Active Needle Technology Ltd,PZFlex Limited (UK),Sonic Systems Limited,CTS Corporation,NHS Greater Glasgow and ClydeFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/R045291/1Funder Contribution: 6,114,690 GBPThe range of surgical tools for interventional procedures that dissect or fragment tissue has not changed significantly for millennia. There is huge potential for ultrasonic devices to enable new minimal access surgeries, offering higher precision, much lower force, better preservation of delicate structures, low thermal damage and, importantly, enabling more procedures to be carried out on an out-patient or day surgery basis. To realise this potential, and deliver our vision of ultrasonics being the technology of choice for minimal access interventional surgery, a completely new approach to device design is required, to achieve miniaturisation and to incorporate both a cutting and healing capability in the devices. By integrating with innovative flexible, tentacle-like surgical robots, we will bring ultrasonic devices deep into the human body, along tortuous pathways to the surgical site, to deliver unparalleled precision. Unsurpassed precision in challenging neurological, skull-base and spinal procedures as well as in general surgery is attainable through tailoring the robotic-ultrasonic devices to deliver the exact ultrasonic energy to the exact locations required to optimise the surgery. We will achieve this by quantifying the effects of the ultrasonic excitations typical of surgical devices in tissues, at and surrounding the site of surgery, in terms of precision cutting, tissue damage (mechanical damage, thermal necrosis, cavitation) but also the potential to aid regeneration. We will make world-leading advances in ultra-high speed imaging measurements and biophysical analysis, complementing advances in histology and clinical assessment, to develop a combined approach to the characterisation of both damage and regeneration of tissue. Through this holistic approach to device design, we will create integrated robotic-ultrasonic surgical devices tailored for optimised surgery.
more_vert