
Novalia
Novalia
7 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2019Partners:EPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics, EPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics, SmartLife Inc Ltd, Imperial College London, Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA +6 partnersEPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics,EPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics,SmartLife Inc Ltd,Imperial College London,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,Heatcoat Ltd,Smartlife Inc Ltd,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,Heathcoat Fabrics Limited,Novalia,NovaliaFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P02534X/2Funder Contribution: 18,056 GBPTechnology and our economy in general, usually advance either by incremental steps (e.g. scaling the size and number of transistors on a chip) or by quantum leaps (transition from vacuum tubes to semiconductor technologies). Disruptive technologies behind such revolutions are usually underpinned by new form of materials with dramatic, orders of magnitude improvements in applications, which change many aspects of our life simultaneously, penetrating every corner of our existence. Wearable technologies present a market opportunity in excess of $53 billion [Soreon '15] in RCUK priority areas such as healthcare, wellbeing and Internet of Things (IoT). Current wearable technologies rely on rigid electronic components mounted on flexible materials such as plastic films. These offer limited compatibility with the skin in many circumstances, suffer washing and are uncomfortable to wear because they are not breathable. Turning fibres into functional electronic components can address these problems. Work is already underway to have synthetic fibres with electronic functionality. However, issues such as breathability, washability and comfort still remain, as these are properties associated with natural materials. This project will enable natural fibres such as cotton and wool to show basic electronic functions such as conductivity and light emission. SWIFT will demonstrate the potential of this approach, create impact and raise awareness. Further work would lead to greater functionality: i.e. sensing. SWIFT aims to demonstrate new cotton-based optoelectronic fibre components that offer breathability, washability and compatibility with the skin. The project will exploit existing nanomaterials, functional organic materials and polymer composite technology together with the know-how on nanotechnology existing in Cambridge to develop conductive and light-emitting cotton/cellulose fibres that could be woven to make fibre-based, stretchable conductive and light-emitting fabrics for future textile-based wearable displays, sensors or smart patches with potential applications in healthcare, wellbeing, IoT, lighting, sensing.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2019Partners:University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, Smartlife Inc Ltd, Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA, Heathcoat Fabrics Limited +9 partnersUniversity of Cambridge,Imperial College London,Smartlife Inc Ltd,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,Heathcoat Fabrics Limited,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,EPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics,Novalia,University of Cambridge,Novalia,Heatcoat Ltd,EPSRC Ctr for Large Area Electronics,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,SmartLife Inc LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P02534X/1Funder Contribution: 101,140 GBPTechnology and our economy in general, usually advance either by incremental steps (e.g. scaling the size and number of transistors on a chip) or by quantum leaps (transition from vacuum tubes to semiconductor technologies). Disruptive technologies behind such revolutions are usually underpinned by new form of materials with dramatic, orders of magnitude improvements in applications, which change many aspects of our life simultaneously, penetrating every corner of our existence. Wearable technologies present a market opportunity in excess of $53 billion [Soreon '15] in RCUK priority areas such as healthcare, wellbeing and Internet of Things (IoT). Current wearable technologies rely on rigid electronic components mounted on flexible materials such as plastic films. These offer limited compatibility with the skin in many circumstances, suffer washing and are uncomfortable to wear because they are not breathable. Turning fibres into functional electronic components can address these problems. Work is already underway to have synthetic fibres with electronic functionality. However, issues such as breathability, washability and comfort still remain, as these are properties associated with natural materials. This project will enable natural fibres such as cotton and wool to show basic electronic functions such as conductivity and light emission. SWIFT will demonstrate the potential of this approach, create impact and raise awareness. Further work would lead to greater functionality: i.e. sensing. SWIFT aims to demonstrate new cotton-based optoelectronic fibre components that offer breathability, washability and compatibility with the skin. The project will exploit existing nanomaterials, functional organic materials and polymer composite technology together with the know-how on nanotechnology existing in Cambridge to develop conductive and light-emitting cotton/cellulose fibres that could be woven to make fibre-based, stretchable conductive and light-emitting fabrics for future textile-based wearable displays, sensors or smart patches with potential applications in healthcare, wellbeing, IoT, lighting, sensing.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2021Partners:Novalia, Merck Chemicals Ltd UK, University of Salford, Flexenable Limited, MERCK CHEMICALS LTD +12 partnersNovalia,Merck Chemicals Ltd UK,University of Salford,Flexenable Limited,MERCK CHEMICALS LTD,NPL,BGT Materials Ltd,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Tata Group UK,FlexEnable (United Kingdom),The University of Manchester,Novalia,Cambridge Nanosystems,National Physical Laboratory,Cambridge Nanosystems,BGT Materials (United Kingdom),University of ManchesterFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N010345/1Funder Contribution: 4,056,140 GBPModern technology demands increasingly larger number of new materials to suit the specific requirement of the particular applications. The search for new materials, or even better, for materials with tuneable properties, has dramatically intensified over the last decade. The best strategy here are the composite materials and heterostructures, which allow ultimate tuning of material parameters, combinations of otherwise unmatchable properties and can provide multiple functionalities. However, usually such materials are not readily accessible due to cost and the complex technology required for assembly/production of such structures. Here we propose a new paradigm in creating such composite materials: heterostructures based on 2D atomic crystals, which can be assembled by mass-production means. This way we will decouple the performance of particular devices from the properties of naturally available materials. The ultimate goal is to develop a new paradigm of "materials on demand" with properties precisely tailored for novel complex architectures and structures. The ground-breaking nature of our research and the development of the mass-production technique of the production of such heterostructures will have huge impact on future technology. We will also demonstrate prototypes of multifunctional devices which are based on such a technology. Examples of devices we are planning to create are temperature, humidity, light, strain and many other sensors which will be battery-free and powered by absorbing radio waves (RFID technology, also enabled by printed electronics) for remote sensing applications. Such wirelessly interconnected tuneable sensors and actuators can create a platform for the fast-growing "Internet of Things" paradigm. 2D atomic crystals are one atom thick materials. The family of such crystals is very large and includes transition metal dichalcogenides, hexagonal boron nitride, graphene among many others. Collectively, they cover a large range of properties: from conductive to insulating, from transparent to opaque, from mechanically stiff to compliant. Also, very often the properties of such 2D crystals are very different from the properties of their 3D precursors. Interestingly, many of the unique properties of the 2D crystals are preserved even when we create suspensions (2D inks) out of these materials. Such inks can be used for deposition of the 2D materials to any surfaces, creating low-cost, conformal functional coating. Still, the most important property of materials in this family is the possibility to assemble them into 3D stacks, creating novel heterostructures. Such heterostructures have proven to have new functionalities (tunnelling transistors, LED, etc) or even combinations of several functionalities. The large selection of 2D crystals, ensures that the parameters of such heterostructures can be tuned in a wide range. In this project we propose to develop a low-cost technique to be able to print such heterostructures from 2D inks. Several members of the consortium have already demonstrated that tunnelling diodes, tunnelling transistors and photodetectors can be printed using standard mass-production technologies. We will significantly increase the range of heterostructures produced by such methods, and will specifically concentrate on heterostructures which produce active response (thermo-power, piezoelectric, photovoltaic, etc). Such heterostructures can act as sensors in a number of applications. We will then combine this technology with already developed technique of printing RFID antenna by using graphene inks. This would allow us to create RFID sensors of different types which do not require power source. For instance, we can record temperature of a product or illumination this product has been subjected to. Multifunctional sensors can naturally be achieved with such technique (for instance temperature, strain and humidity could be recorded at the same time).
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:Henry Royce Institute, Novalia, ANDOR TECHNOLOGY LIMITED, Messrs Avx/kyocera, Ossila Ltd. +25 partnersHenry Royce Institute,Novalia,ANDOR TECHNOLOGY LIMITED,Messrs Avx/kyocera,Ossila Ltd.,[no title available],Andor Technology Ltd,UK-CPI,SmartKem Ltd,Novalia,Ossila Ltd.,Knowles (UK) Ltd,University of Sheffield,University of Sheffield,Bruker (United States),UK-CPI (dup'e),Knowles (UK) Ltd,Emerson & Renwick Ltd,Henry Royce Institute,Cubit Precision Measurement Limited,Oxford Instruments (United Kingdom),SmartKem Ltd,Emerson & Renwick Ltd,Messrs Avx/kyocera,Bruker Corporation,FOM Technologies A/S,Polytec Ltd (UK),Cubit Precision Measurement Limited,FOM Technologies A/S,Polytec LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V051261/1Funder Contribution: 2,026,000 GBPThin films with a high technical specification are used in many everyday devices, including displays, solar cells, electronic devices, batteries, and sensors. Printing of the high-value flexible electronic films with insulating, dielectric, semiconducting and conducting materials used in these devices makes a major and rapidly growing contribution to UK industry.The thickness of the films required, the starting materials used and the final high-value functions desired in the finished product vary significantly. However, the scientific principles that govern the behaviour of the printing processes for these diverse applications have many similarities, because they are all formed by selectively spreading a wet film of suspended solid particles and drying it. At present the optimisation of the printing parameters for these films is commonly achieved through a trial and error process rather than systematic intelligent control. Individual processes are being optimised in isolation without cross-fertilization of knowledge. In a fast changing world, where disruption to supply chains or development of improved materials can change the process input materials, the need to reconfigure the formulations/printing parameters used increases. Furthermore, desired outputs can also change rapidly as the manufacturers and customers seek to meet changing demands of their market for example requiring more precise control of film parameters such as thickness and electrical properties. Adjusting to such continually moving goal posts by relying on trial and error testing is time-consuming, wasteful and costly. The responsive manufacturing technology we propose to develop will have sufficient flexibility to overcome such problems by utilizing intelligent machine learning to control the printing parameters in real-time and therefore maintain an optimized printing process robustly in the face of variations in feedstock materials and/or the required output. It is surprising that there has been no major attempt to implement this approach to process control and optimisation for solution printed materials. This is despite process monitoring and feedback-based optimisation being proven enabling methods in other sectors such as additive manufacturing. This will be achieved by developing control algorithms for the printing process that take into account our theoretical understanding of the processes occurring and utilizing high-speed (minimized and proxy) in situ data acquisition to respond autonomously and continuously to perturbations in the feedstock materials or required film properties. We will make use of the wide range of laboratory scale processing systems our project team regularly use for the production of model colloidal films, ceramic dielectrics, photovoltaics and battery electrodes to provide the datasets required to educate the machine learning algorithms, test our theoretical understanding, develop models of the printing processes and to ultimately test the autonomous control system that we develop. Having proven the system works at a laboratory scale we plan to perform a series of demonstration runs at industrial scale in collaboration with project partners CPI who are world leading experts in production of printed electronics. This will provide the evidence needed to prove that this approach can work at an industrial scale in a highly demanding production environment (printed electronics require a high degree of control of the surface chemistry between subsequent layers to perform correctly and are typically made in cleanroom/glove-boxes within strict environmental tolerances). We envisage a future where a deep theoretical understanding of the processes that are taking place is utilised by artificial intelligence to continuously control and optimise the manufacture of 21st century high-value printed films autonomously using the minimum number of high-speed measurements to achieve the desired results.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2013 - 2018Partners:Momentive Performance Materials Inc, Novalia, Victrex (United Kingdom), Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom), Plastic Logic (United Kingdom) +43 partnersMomentive Performance Materials Inc,Novalia,Victrex (United Kingdom),Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom),Plastic Logic (United Kingdom),University of Cambridge,UCL,Aixtron Ltd,Polyfect Solutions Ltd,Aixtron (United Kingdom),CamLase Ltd,Tonejet Limited,Technology Partnership (United Kingdom),NanoBeam Limited,Johnson Matthey (United Kingdom),Hardy Advanced Composites,Dyson Limited,Printed Electronics Ltd,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,Emdot Limited,JOHNSON MATTHEY PLC,Welsh Centre for Printing and Coating,Nokia Research Centre,Novalia,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,DuPont (United Kingdom),Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom),Emdot Limited,TONEJET LIMITED,NANEUM,Printed Electronics (United Kingdom),Plastic Logic (United Kingdom),University of Cambridge,Cambridge Enterprise,Momentive Performance Materials Inc,Cambridge Enterprise,Nokia Research Centre (UK),Dyson Appliances Ltd,JM,Victrex plc,Cambridge Integrated Knowledge Centre,Polyfect Solutions Ltd,Welsh Centre for Printing and Coating,DuPont (UK) Ltd,Luigi Bandera Mechanical Engineering SpA,Hardy Advanced Composites,DuPont (UK) Ltd,CamLase LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/K017144/1Funder Contribution: 6,883,330 GBPGraphene has many record properties. It is transparent like (or better than) plastic, but conducts heat and electricity better than any metal, it is an elastic thin film, behaves as an impermeable membrane, and it is chemically inert and stable. Thus it is ideal for the production of next generation transparent conductors. Thin and flexible graphene-based electronic components may be obtained and modularly integrated, and thin portable devices may be assembled and distributed. Graphene can withstand dramatic mechanical deformation, for instance it can be folded without breaking. Foldable devices can be imagined, together with a wealth of new form factors, with innovative concepts of integration and distribution. At present, the realisation of an electronic device (such as, e.g., a mobile phone) requires the assembly of a variety of components obtained by many technologies. Graphene, by including different properties within the same material, can offer the opportunity to build a comprehensive technological platform for the realisation of almost any device component, including transistors, batteries, optoelectronic components, photovoltaic cells, (photo)detectors, ultrafast lasers, bio- and physicochemical sensors, etc. Such a change in the paradigm of device manufacturing would revolutionise the global industry. UK will have the chance to re-acquire a prominent position within the global Information and Communication Technology industry, by exploiting the synergy of excellent researchers and manufacturers. Our vision is to take graphene from a state of raw potential to a point where it can revolutionise flexible, wearable and transparent (opto)electronics, with a manifold return for UK, in innovation and exploitation. Graphene has benefits both in terms of cost-advantage, and uniqueness of attributes and performance. It will enable cheap, energy autonomous and disposable devices and communication systems, integrated in transparent and flexible surfaces, with application to smart homes, industrial processes, environmental monitoring, personal healthcare and more. This will lead to ultimate device wearability, new user interfaces and novel interaction paradigms, with new opportunities in communication, gaming, media, social networking, sport and wellness. By enabling flexible (opto)electronics, graphene will allow the exploitation of the existing knowledge base and infrastructure of companies working on organic electronics (organic LEDs, conductive polymers, printable electronics), and a unique synergistic framework for collecting and underpinning many distributed technical competences. The strategic focus of the proposed Cambridge Graphene Centre will be in activities built around the central challenge of flexible and energy efficient (opto)electronics, for which graphene is a unique enabling platform. This will allow us to 1) grow and produce graphene by chemical vapour deposition and liquid phase exfoliation on large scale; 2) prepare and test inks, up to a controlled and closely monitored pilot line. The target is several litres per week of optimized solutions and inks, ready to be provided to present and future partners for testing in their plants; 3) design, test and produce a variety of flexible, antennas, detectors and RF devices based on graphene and related materials, covering all present and future wavelength ranges; 4) prototype and test flexible batteries and supercapacitors and package them for implementation in realistic devices. Our present and future industrial partners will be able to conduct pilot-phase research and device prototyping in this facility, before moving to larger scale testing in realistic industrial settings. Spin-off companies will be incubated, and start-ups will be able to contract their more fundamental work to this facility.
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