Oct. 22, 2024
The Institute for Matter and Systems (IMS) held its opening showcase on October 15, 2024, in the Marcus Nanotechnology Building at Georgia Tech.
“We're trying to link people from fundamental science through materials, measurements, modelling software, systems, economics, and public policy,” said Eric Vogel, IMS executive director.
Vogel noted that IMS does this in four ways— through research support, fabrication and characterization core facilities, education and outreach programs and strategic external engagement.
The Institute for Matter and Systems arose from the union of the Institute of Electronics and Nanotechnology and the Institute for Materials. Each of the latter two interdisciplinary research institutes focused on major national priorities — the National Nanotechnology Initiative and the Materials Genome Initiative, respectively. The work done by IMS researchers flies at the intersection of technology, innovation, and science, with a focus on creating technological and societal transformation through devices, processes and components.
The event featured the second annual Oliver Brand Memorial Lectureship on Electronics and Nanotechnology. The lecture was presented by Michael Strano, whose research focuses on micro-robotics.
After the lecture, guests were invited to explore IMS’s research centers and facilities. Walking tours of the micro/nano fabrication cleanroom and material characterization facility showcased the core facilities available to those who engage with IMS. Booths featuring IMS supported research centers allowed guests to explore the breadth of research activities happening within the research institute.
Oct. 22, 2024
For his work creating new kinds of drug delivery techniques and bringing those technologies to patients, Mark Prausnitz is one of the new members of the National Academy of Medicine (NAM).
The Academy announced his election Oct. 21 alongside 99 others. Membership in NAM is considered one of the highest recognitions in health and medicine, reserved for those who’ve made major contributions to healthcare, medical sciences, and public health. The roster is small: only 2,400 or so individuals have been honored.
“It’s an honor to be elected to the National Academy of Medicine and have the work of our team at Georgia Tech recognized in this way,” said Prausnitz, Regents’ Professor and J. Erskine Love Jr. Chair in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering.
The Academy cited Prausnitz for innovating microneedle and other advanced drug delivery technologies. He also was honored for translating those methods and devices into clinical trials and products and founding companies to bring the advances to patients. NAM praised Prausnitz for “inspiring students to be creative and impactful engineers.”
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Joshua Stewart
College of Engineering
Oct. 22, 2024
It was a full house in Georgia Tech’s Marcus Nanotechnology Building for the Oliver Brand Memorial Lectureship on Electronics and Nanotechnology on October 15, 2024. The lecture was presented by Michael Strano, Carbon C. Dubs professor of chemical engineering at MIT, on nanoelectronics grafted onto and within colloids for colloidal state machines and micro-robots.
“We have gathered today to remember a remarkable individual, Professor Oliver Brand, and his contributions to Georgia Tech and to the field of electronics and nanotechnology,” said Michael Filler, Institute for Matter and Systems deputy director.
“Beyond his academic success, Oliver was a mentor, a colleague, and a friend,” Filler added. “He was known for his sharp mind, his gentle style, and his unwavering support for those around him. His ability to foster collaboration has left an indelible mark on the community, near and far.”
Strano’s talk was the second annual lecture in honor of Brand who served as executive director of the Georgia Tech Institute of Electronics and Nanotechnology (IEN) from 2014 - 2023.
While he never worked directly with Brand, Strano emphasized Brand’s impact in the field of electronics and nanotechnology as well as his impact during the Covid-19 pandemic.
“I can’t say anything better than what Oliver’s colleagues have already said,” said Strano. “They said he was a pioneer and described him as trans-disciplinary and had an enormous impact. Few can match the magnitude of his influence on campus and during the pandemic.”
Strano highlighted the importance of interdisciplinary work, which is necessary to create anything on the nanoscale, with emphasis on his team’s work creating nanoelectronics for micro-robotics. Strano, a chemical engineer, mentioned multiple times that his work — creating nanoscale electronics — would not exist without collaborating with electrical engineers.
Brand, who died in 2023, as a legacy that lives on through interdisciplinary research at Georgia Tech. He spent more than 20 years as a member of the Institute’s faculty. In addition to leading IEN, he was a professor in the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, director of the Coordinating Office for the NSF-funded National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI), and director of the Southeastern Nanotechnology Infrastructure Corridor, one of the 16 NNCI sites.
Brand united researchers in the fields of electronics and nanotechnology, fostering collaboration and expanding IEN to include more than 200 faculty members. In addition to his respected work in the field of microelectromechanical systems, he is remembered for his kindness, dedication, and unwavering support for all who knew him.
Oct. 10, 2024
The National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI) announced the winners of the 2024 image contest. The contest, Plenty of Beauty at the Bottom, celebrates the beauty of the micro and nanoscale.
Sites from across the NNCI contributed stunning, unique, and whimsical images of the micro and nanoscale for the 2024 image contest. The public cast over 2,100 votes to determine this year’s winners. First place winning artists will receive up to $1,000 in travel support to a professional conference of their choice and their sites receive a framed print of their winning image. Honorable mentions will receive a framed print of their image.
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Oct. 01, 2024
Whether it’s developing new products, reducing costs, or increasing accessibility, innovations in manufacturing stand to improve the lives of companies and consumers alike. Georgia Tech recently took another step toward ensuring those innovations make it from lab to market with the launch of a Modular Pilot Scale Roll-to-Roll Manufacturing Facility.
“As researchers develop new materials, one of the key aspects we’re missing is how to make them at scale. This is a major oversight because if we can’t make them at scale, we can’t transition from basic research to commercialization,” said Tequila Harris, a professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering. “With this new facility, we can prove our discoveries beyond lab-scale studies — and can go from materials innovation to product development at scale.”
Led by Harris, the new facility is the result of a partnership between the Georgia Tech Manufacturing Institute(GTMI), the Strategic Energy Institute, and the Woodruff School. As a pilot facility, it will serve as a testbed for scaling up manufacturing research open for Georgia Tech researchers as well as academic, government, and industry partners around the world.
“The larger vision I see at Georgia Tech involves innovation in manufacturing for large-scale industries,” said Georgia Tech’s Interim Executive Vice President for Research Tim Lieuwen at the facility’s unveiling event on Sept. 19. “It’s crucial that we’re innovating in basic science and technology, but we also need to be innovating in large-scale manufacturing.”
Roll-to-roll (R2R) manufacturing transforms flexible rolls of substrate materials, such as paper, metal foils, and plastics, into more complex, transportable rolls upon coating the surface with one or more fluids, such as inks, suspensions, and solutions, which are subsequently dried or cured on the base substrate. Its high yield and efficiency make R2R an ideal method for the sustainable, large-scale production of components for solar cells, batteries, flexible electronics, and separations — all industries that have expanded in Georgia in recent years.
“As a state institution, we’re ultimately here to serve our state,” said Lieuwen, who is also Regents’ Professor and David S. Lewis Jr. Chair in the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering. “We’re seeing Georgia emerge as the national leader in terms of recruiting corporate investments in this space and in industries that will be served by this facility.”
Roll-to-Roll Innovations
The R2R process is similar to the production of newspapers, where a large roll of blank paper goes through a series of rollers printing text and photos. “The roll-to-roll aspect is the process of using a specialized tool to force fluid onto a moving surface,” says Harris. It’s one of the fastest-growing methods for producing thin film materials — photovoltaics used in solar cells, transistors in flexible electronics, and micro-batteries, for example — at a large scale.
Harris’s group works to develop novel manufacturing tools, with a particular focus on understanding and improving the dynamics of thin film manufacturing to increase efficiency and minimize waste. Her group is particularly interested in slot die coating, an R2R technique where a liquid material is precisely deposited onto a substrate through a narrow slot. With the new pilot facility, researchers like Harris will be able to take their work to the next level.
“Slot die coating on a roll-to-roll can handle the broadest viscosity range of most coating methods. Therefore, you can process a lot of different materials very quickly and easily,” says Harris. “It’s one of the fastest-growing technologies in the U.S. — and currently, this is the most advanced modular pilot scale facility at an academic university in the United States.”
“Georgia Tech is way ahead of the curve in terms of our facilities,” says GTMI Executive Director and Regents’ Professor Thomas Kurfess. “This will grow our capability in the battery area, membranes, flexible electronics, and more to allow us to support the development of new technologies.”
“As technologies around cleantech continue to advance at an unprecedented pace, pilot manufacturing facilities provide a critical bridge between innovative benchtop research and commercial-scale production and manufacturing,” says Christine Conwell, interim executive director of the Strategic Energy Institute. “We are excited about the opportunities this R2R facility will provide to the Georgia Tech energy community and our industry partners.”
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Audra Davidson
Research Communications Program Manager
Georgia Tech Manufacturing Institute
Sep. 16, 2024
Michael Fonseca presented the inaugural ‘Systems Matter’ seminar hosted by the Institute for Matter and Systems on Tuesday, September 10.
“We are privileged to have Mike here to share his wealth of knowledge and insights from his extensive experience in both the academic and corporate sectors of the medical device industry,” said Michael Filler, Deputy Director of IMS.
Fonseca’s talk, titled “Using the Inertia of Matter and MEMS Systems to Measure and Diagnose Complex Cardiovascular and Pulmonary Diseases”, focused on the development of systems that combine sensors and navigation systems to monitor and manage complex diseases.
Fonseca is no stranger to Georgia Tech. He received his B.S. in Electrical Engineering and during his Ph.D. he worked with Mark Allen and the late Oliver Brand on MEMS research.
The Systems Matter Seminar Series brings experts in the areas of materials, devices, and processes together twice a month to share innovative research in those areas. Learn more about the series and view the full list of speakers here.
Sep. 03, 2024
The Institute for Matter and Systems (IMS) has received $700,000 in funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for two education and outreach programs.
The awards will support the Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) and Research Experience for Teachers (RET) programs at Georgia Tech. The REU summer internship program provides undergraduate students from two- and four-year programs the chance to perform cutting-edge research at the forefront of nanoscale science and engineering. The RET program for high school teachers and technical college faculty offers a paid opportunity to experience the excitement of nanotechnology research and to share this experience in their classrooms.
“This NSF funding allows us to be able to do more with the programs,” said Mikkel Thomas, associate director for education and outreach. “These are programs that have existed in the past, but we haven’t had external funding for the last three years. The NSF support allows us to do more — bring more students into the program or increase the RET stipends.”
In addition to the REU and RET programs, IMS offers short courses and workshops focused on professional development, instructional labs for undergraduate and graduate students, a certificate for veterans in microelectronics and nano-manufacturing, and community engagement activities such as the Atlanta Science Festival.
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Amelia Neumeister | Communications Program Manager
Aug. 28, 2024
The National Science Foundation has awarded $2 million to Clark Atlanta University in partnership with the HBCU CHIPS Network, a collaborative effort involving historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), government agencies, academia, and industry that will serve as a national resource for semiconductor research and education.
“This is an exciting time for the HBCU CHIPS Network,” said George White, senior director for Strategic Partnerships at Georgia Tech. “This funding, and the support of Georgia Tech Executive Vice President for Research Chaouki Abdallah, is integral for the successful launch of the CHIPS Network.”
The HBCU Chips Network works to cultivate a diverse and skilled workforce that supports the national semiconductor industry. The student research and internship opportunities along with the development of specialized curricula in semiconductor design, fabrication, and related fields will expand the microelectronics workforce. As part of the network, Georgia Tech will optimize the packaging of chips into systems.
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Georgia Tech Contact:
Amelia Neumeister | Research Communications Program Manager
Clark Atlanta University Contact:
Frances Williams
Aug. 19, 2024
Nylon, Teflon, Kevlar. These are just a few familiar polymers — large-molecule chemical compounds — that have changed the world. From Teflon-coated frying pans to 3D printing, polymers are vital to creating the systems that make the world function better.
Finding the next groundbreaking polymer is always a challenge, but now Georgia Tech researchers are using artificial intelligence (AI) to shape and transform the future of the field. Rampi Ramprasad’s group develops and adapts AI algorithms to accelerate materials discovery.
This summer, two papers published in the Nature family of journals highlight the significant advancements and success stories emerging from years of AI-driven polymer informatics research. The first, featured in Nature Reviews Materials, showcases recent breakthroughs in polymer design across critical and contemporary application domains: energy storage, filtration technologies, and recyclable plastics. The second, published in Nature Communications, focuses on the use of AI algorithms to discover a subclass of polymers for electrostatic energy storage, with the designed materials undergoing successful laboratory synthesis and testing.
“In the early days of AI in materials science, propelled by the White House’s Materials Genome Initiative over a decade ago, research in this field was largely curiosity-driven,” said Ramprasad, a professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering. “Only in recent years have we begun to see tangible, real-world success stories in AI-driven accelerated polymer discovery. These successes are now inspiring significant transformations in the industrial materials R&D landscape. That’s what makes this review so significant and timely.”
AI Opportunities
Ramprasad’s team has developed groundbreaking algorithms that can instantly predict polymer properties and formulations before they are physically created. The process begins by defining application-specific target property or performance criteria. Machine learning (ML) models train on existing material-property data to predict these desired outcomes. Additionally, the team can generate new polymers, whose properties are forecasted with ML models. The top candidates that meet the target property criteria are then selected for real-world validation through laboratory synthesis and testing. The results from these new experiments are integrated with the original data, further refining the predictive models in a continuous, iterative process.
While AI can accelerate the discovery of new polymers, it also presents unique challenges. The accuracy of AI predictions depends on the availability of rich, diverse, extensive initial data sets, making quality data paramount. Additionally, designing algorithms capable of generating chemically realistic and synthesizable polymers is a complex task.
The real challenge begins after the algorithms make their predictions: proving that the designed materials can be made in the lab and function as expected and then demonstrating their scalability beyond the lab for real-world use. Ramprasad’s group designs these materials, while their fabrication, processing, and testing are carried out by collaborators at various institutions, including Georgia Tech. Professor Ryan Lively from the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering frequently collaborates with Ramprasad’s group and is a co-author of the paper published in Nature Reviews Materials.
"In our day-to-day research, we extensively use the machine learning models Rampi’s team has developed,” Lively said. “These tools accelerate our work and allow us to rapidly explore new ideas. This embodies the promise of ML and AI because we can make model-guided decisions before we commit time and resources to explore the concepts in the laboratory."
Using AI, Ramprasad’s team and their collaborators have made significant advancements in diverse fields, including energy storage, filtration technologies, additive manufacturing, and recyclable materials.
Polymer Progress
One notable success, described in the Nature Communications paper, involves the design of new polymers for capacitors, which store electrostatic energy. These devices are vital components in electric and hybrid vehicles, among other applications. Ramprasad’s group worked with researchers from the University of Connecticut.
Current capacitor polymers offer either high energy density or thermal stability, but not both. By leveraging AI tools, the researchers determined that insulating materials made from polynorbornene and polyimide polymers can simultaneously achieve high energy density and high thermal stability. The polymers can be further enhanced to function in demanding environments, such as aerospace applications, while maintaining environmental sustainability.
“The new class of polymers with high energy density and high thermal stability is one of the most concrete examples of how AI can guide materials discovery,” said Ramprasad. “It is also the result of years of multidisciplinary collaborative work with Greg Sotzing and Yang Cao at the University of Connecticut and sustained sponsorship by the Office of Naval Research.”
Industry Potential
The potential for real-world translation of AI-assisted materials development is underscored by industry participation in the Nature Reviews Materials article. Co-authors of this paper also include scientists from Toyota Research Institute and General Electric. To further accelerate the adoption of AI-driven materials development in industry, Ramprasad co-founded Matmerize Inc., a software startup company recently spun out of Georgia Tech. Their cloud-based polymer informatics software is already being used by companies across various sectors, including energy, electronics, consumer products, chemical processing, and sustainable materials.
“Matmerize has transformed our research into a robust, versatile, and industry-ready solution, enabling users to design materials virtually with enhanced efficiency and reduced cost,” Ramprasad said. “What began as a curiosity has gained significant momentum, and we are entering an exciting new era of materials by design.”
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Tess Malone, Senior Research Writer/Editor
tess.malone@gatech.edu
Aug. 01, 2024
Meilin Liu, Hightower Chair and Regents’ Professor in the School of Materials Science and Engineering, has been elected to the European Academy of Sciences (EURASC).
The honor is annually awarded to European scholars and engineers for their research and contributing to the development of advanced technologies. Members also demonstrate a strong commitment to promoting science and technology in Europe.
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Jason Maderer
College of Engineering
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