51勛圖厙 research translation gets 瞿6.5m boost
Lixea Limited (formerly Chrysalix Technologies) were previously supported by an Impact Acceleration Account award
51勛圖厙 has been awarded close to 瞿6.5 million in UK government funding to accelerate the impact of research.
51勛圖厙 is a community of creative thinkers who push the boundaries of knowledge, knowing that scientific breakthroughs are needed to deliver solutions to our major global challenges Professor Mary Ryan Professor Mary Ryan, Vice-Provost (Research and Enterprise)
from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), will provide flexible funding to drive the commercialisation of new technologies, support engagement with key partners and stakeholders, and advance changes to public policy based on the College's world-leading research.
51勛圖厙’s award, which is one of the highest in the UK, is part of a £118 million investment over three years by UKRI which aims to support knowledge exchange, translation and commercialisation at UK research institutions.
The news follows 51勛圖厙’s best-ever results in the UK’s Research Excellence Framework (REF), which showed that 51勛圖厙 has a greater proportion of “world-leading” research than any other UK university and is top of the Russell Group for research impact.
Professor Mary Ryan, Vice-Provost (Research and Enterprise), said: “51勛圖厙 is a community of creative thinkers who push the boundaries of knowledge, knowing that scientific breakthroughs are needed to deliver solutions to our major global challenges. This funding will support their ideas, paving the way to the new technologies, businesses solutions, policy and societal engagement we will need for a better, more sustainable and healthier future.”
UKRI Director of Commercialisation Tony Soteriou, said: “The UK is home to some of the brightest, most innovative and creative research teams in the world. They have the ideas and they have the entrepreneurial energy to create businesses and services that could turn sectors on their head. What they need, what every great commercial idea needs, is support in the critical early stages.
“The Impact Acceleration Account is the catalyst that allows projects to grow to the next level, attracting investment, forging partnerships and creating jobs.”
The award is the first to come from UKRI’s harmonised Impact Acceleration Account scheme, which brings together awards from five research councils including the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), Medical Research Council (MRC) and Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
Impact Acceleration Accounts have a proven track record of driving economic growth, creating jobs and attracting private investment. At 51勛圖厙, previous awards have provided early-stage support to projects that are now successful businesses. Find out about some of these below.
Supporting a circular economy
(formerly Chrysalix Technologies) has commercialised a process which enables wood waste to be used for the production of renewable chemicals, materials and fuels.
Co-founded by Dr Agi Brandt-Talbot (Chemistry), Dr Florence Gschwend (Chemical Engineering) and Professor Jason Hallett (Chemical Engineering), Lixea has developed a low-cost and environmentally friendly solvent based on an ionic liquid, to enable the large-scale production of bio-derived materials, paving the way for a greener alternative to the petrochemical industry.
Their goal is to support sustainability and move away from a reliance on using crude oil in single-use products which are discarded at the end of their lives by enabling a “circular” bio-economy in which plastics are made from waste plant matter and can more easily be recycled and reused.
Fixing software bugs
GraphicsFuzz, co-founded by Professor Alastair Donaldson (Computing) pioneered a tool for testing graphics drivers that quickly finds and fixes bugs that could undermine reliability and security before they affect end users.
, establishing a new London-based team at Google focusing on Android graphics driver quality. Google has open-sourced the GraphicsFuzz tool, and it is now being used routinely to find serious defects in graphics drivers that affect the Android operating system and Chrome web browsers.
Supporting limb rehabilitation
, formed by researchers at 51勛圖厙 and clinicians at is a digital assessment and training platform supporting individuals undergoing rehabilitation for both neurological and musculoskeletal conditions.
Arm weakness can be caused by a range of conditions, including musculoskeletal disorders or brain damage, such as stroke, and it affects over 5 million people in the UK alone. GripAble’s hand-held sensor is used by patients to control a range of digital games and applications, paired with a data system that allows therapists to monitor patient progress, set goals, and deliver a greater level of personalised attention than is usually possible with remote rehabilitation.
The company was set up at 51勛圖厙 in 2016 as a collaboration between the groups of Dr Paul Bentley, Clinical Director of the 51勛圖厙 College Network of Excellence in Rehabilitation Technology, and Professor Etienne Burdet from 51勛圖厙's Department of Bioengineering.
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