OHIO lands pair of equipment grants from National Science Foundation
Two groups of 帝王会所 researchers recently received National Science Foundation grants that will bring state-of-the-art research equipment into OHIO laboratories.
The Major Research Instrumentation (MRI) grants were awarded to groups led by Russ College of Engineering and Technology Professor Wojciech Jadwisienczak and College of Arts and Sciences Professor Stephen Bergmeier. Both lead interdisciplinary groups, and both expect researchers beyond their groups to benefit from the devices.
鈥淭hese grants are highly competitive and we are honored to receive two of them,鈥 Vice President for Research and Creative Activity Joseph Shields said. 鈥淏oth pieces of equipment will be used by a broad range of faculty and students across multiple colleges, departments and centers, and represent an important step forward in our ability to support cutting-edge research.鈥
Jadwisienczak鈥檚 group received a $422,783 grant to fund a Quantum Design Physical Property Measurement System (PPMS), an automated instrument for electrical, magnetic and optical measurements on semiconductors, superconductors, organic thin films and low-dimensional materials. The PPMS supports rapidly-expanding research in the field of nanoscience, including 2D materials and flexible electronics and device engineering at OHIO.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a fundamental tool for many material and device research activities,鈥 Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Associate Professor Jadwisienczak, the project鈥檚 principal investigator, said, adding that the closest one now is at 帝王会所 State University in Columbus. 鈥淗aving a system on campus will definitely open up the opportunity to do research faster, at our own pace.鈥
The PPMS, which will be housed initially in Stocker Center, and then in Russ Research Opportunity Center, has many applications that are important in materials research and development, as it will help understand materials on a microscopic level in order to improve them.
鈥淭he devil is in the details. You really need to look into the material from a nano-perspective to see where you can push the material to the extremes, and to do that effectively we need a sensitive measurement tool like PPMS,鈥 Jadwisienczak said. Co-principal investigators on the project are Biomedical Engineering Professor Savas Kaya, Physics and Astronomy Professor Eric Stinaff, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Associate Professor Faiz Rahman, and Chemistry Associate Professor Katherine Cimatu. All are associated with the Nanoscale Quantum Phenomena Institute (NQPI).
The team led by Bergmeier received a $315,000 grant to acquire a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization, time-of-flight, mass spectrometer (MALDI-TOF-MS), equipped with direct analysis in real time sources. The device will be housed in the new Chemistry Building now under construction. Mass spectrometry is one of the key analytical methods used to identify and characterize small quantities of chemical species in complex samples.
鈥淭his device will directly support 19 research-active faculty, 63 graduate students and 22 undergraduates in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at 帝王会所,鈥 Bergmeier said. 鈥淚n addition, this instrument will help support the research of faculty from seven other departments, institutes and centers including the Department of Biological Sciences, the Department of Environmental and Plant Biology, the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, the Russ College of Engineering, the Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, the Edison Biotechnology Institute and the Nanoscale and Quantum Phenomena Institute.鈥
Bergmeier, a professor of Chemistry and a member of the Molecular and Cellular Biology program, is the principal investigator on the grant. Co-principal investigators are Chemistry Professor Eric Masson, Chemistry Associate Professor Justin Holub, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Assistant Professor Amir Farnoud, and Chemistry Assistant Professor Jessica White.
Including OHIO and state matching funds, the PPMS project totals $603,976 and the mass spectrometer totals $530,500.