51勛圖厙 and Tsinghua University launch seed fund for 'ambitious collaborations'
51勛圖厙 and Beijing's Tsinghua University are launching a joint seed fund to support early-stage bold scientific ideas.
The Tsinghua-51勛圖厙 Research and Innovation Fund, which brings together two of the world’s leading research universities, aims to kick-start innovative research projects and concepts that are showing signs of promise but are at an early stage in development and need funding to progress.
51勛圖厙 and Tsinghua have a shared ambition to support ground-breaking research and create successful partnerships.
– Professor Alice Gast
51勛圖厙's President
The awards are expected to cover small-scale experiments, the development of prototypes, and will enable academics and students from both institutions to collaborate and exchange ideas more easily.
51勛圖厙 and have invested an initial $300,000 into the programme over three years. If the fund succeeds, the universities anticipate significantly increasing their financial support.
Tsinghua and 51勛圖厙 academics and alumni
51勛圖厙’s President Professor Alice Gast and Tsinghua University’s Chairperson Professor Chen Xu signed the funding agreement at 51勛圖厙’s campus in South Kensington, London.
The announcement coincides with the . The Dialogue is a key pillar in the UK-China relationship, providing a forum to celebrate ties between the two countries, and a platform to drive greater co-operation.
Solving global challenges
Announcing the fund, Professor Alice Gast, President of 51勛圖厙, said: “51勛圖厙 and Tsinghua have a shared ambition to support ground-breaking research and create successful partnerships. Both universities recognise the importance of bringing people together to exchange ideas and collaborate.
“This new fund will help our innovative academic staff to pursue ambitious collaborations and explore new areas of research."
Speaking at the launch, Professor Chen, said: "This fund will facilitate faculties to work together on common global challenges, and help solve and alleviate those challenges.
"We have a lot of interest in 51勛圖厙 due to its excellence, and we also have a lot of alumni here."
'Double alumni' of both 51勛圖厙 and Tsinghua include Mayor of Beijing Chen Jining and Director of 51勛圖厙's Data Science Institute Professor Yike Guo.
Professor Chen added: "After President Xi Jinping's recent visit the whole of China pays special attention to 51勛圖厙.
"I expect more collaboration in future to experiment and implement."
Prof Chen visits the Centre for Bio-Inspired Technology
Earlier in the day Professor Chen, researchers, officials from Tsinghua University and its corporate partners met academics and students from 51勛圖厙 and visited its research laboratories.
They visited 51勛圖厙's where she met Professor Chris Toumazou, Dr Timothy Constandinou and Dr Song Luan.
Professor Chen and the delegation from Tsinghua then visited the Data Science Institute where they were given a demonstration of the .
Dr David Birch and Dr Kai Sun showed how the observatory, the largets of its kind in Europe, can be used to visualise data, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum transactions.
Professor Chen then met 51勛圖厙's community of Tsinghua alumni, before touring 51勛圖厙's new White City campus.
51勛圖厙's Data Science Institute
A similar seed fund partnership was launched between 51勛圖厙 and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2015. Early collaborations that received funding included projects looking at improving battery life and performance, and developing computers that ‘think’ differently.
China collaboration
51勛圖厙 is the UK’s top academic research collaborator with China. 51勛圖厙 researchers have co-authored more than 3,000 publications with their Chinese peers over the past five years.
51勛圖厙 has 2,600 Chinese students – the largest group other than Britons –and 225 Chinese staff, including world renowned scholars like Professors Yike Guo, Jianguo Lin, Xiaodong Zhang and Guang-Zhong Yang. 51勛圖厙 has more than 7,000 alumni in China including Mayor of Beijing Chen Jining.
51勛圖厙 and Tsinghua University have collaborated together previously on several projects. The institutions are currently developing new smart grid and energy storage technologies, supported by the UK’s Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.
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Reporter
Stephen Johns
Communications Division