[image above] Core team of the new Fun GLASS Centre of Excellence at the kick-off meeting Trenčín, March 7, 2017. From left: Andrea Kalinayová, Lothar Wondraczek, Alicia Duran, Dusan Galusek, Enrico Bernardo, Jozef Habanik, and Aldo Boccaccini. Credit: FunGLASS

The global glass community received terrific news of a €25 million investment in glass research to establish the new Centre for Functional and Surface-Functionalized Glasses (FunGLASS) in Trenčín, Slovakia. The Centre includes partner institutions in Germany, Spain, and Italy.

This project is the second large-scale glass research project underway. In Brazil in 2013, the São Paulo State Research Foundation funded $22M for 11 years to establish the Center for Research Technology and Education in Vitreous Materials (CeRTEV). Edgar Zanotto at the Federal University of São Carlos leads the Brazilian effort. With CeRTEV only approaching its midpoint, the establishment of this European center boosts the momentum and importance of glass research on a global scale.

The purpose of the Centre is to conduct cutting edge research on glasses with special functional properties, as well as investigate novel strategies for functionalizing conventional glasses. The aim is to modify properties and add new functionalities to expand the range of applications in the optical, energy, structural, and biomedical sectors.

Prof. Galusek, director of the Centre, says, “This Centre will be an important asset for the Slovak Republic mainly due to the fact that it will participate at cutting edge research in cooperation with some of the leaders in the field, generating high added value in all major activities, both in teaching, fundamental science and industry-driven research. The latter is ensured by close ties of the Centre with the local glass industry. We also believe the Centre is of importance for the glass technology sector. Its activities will be focused at those technologies where properties of glass can be substantially altered or new functionalities added by surface treatment, at low energy or material cost, to generate a host of applications for high-tech use.”

The European Commission H2020 program awarded €15 million under the scheme H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-TeamingPhase2 to establish the Centre. Also, the project has additional funding of at least €10 M from the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sports of the Slovak Republic.

The lead institution for the project is the Alexander Dubček University of Trenčín, Slovakia, under the direction of D. Dusan Galusek.  Cooperating institutions and their lead investigators are

Research at the Centre will focus on five main application areas:

  • Biomaterials / materials for healthcare,
  • (ii) Optical materials, including materials with luminescence properties,
  • (iii) Materials for energy-related applications and low-carbon processing,
  • (iv) Other functional materials (i.e. electric, magnetic, etc.), and
  • (v) Structural glass-based materials.

Where applicable, areas will further divide horizontally, in terms of processing and characterization, coatings and sol-gel methods, high-temperature processing, and additive manufacturing approaches.

The core funding will be used to upgrade the existing National Glass Centre in Trenčín, Slovakia, and establish an internationally recognized new hub for research and innovation in glass. Tasks between now and 2023 include creating and formalizing coordination and management structures of the new Centre, building the premises, upgrading the research infrastructure, and expanding staff capacity.

Special attention is paid to hiring outstanding researchers and engineers. Project leaders anticipate approximately 40 new jobs for researchers at all career stages and auxiliary staff. Recruitment began in March 2017.

The funding will allow partners to create a motivating environment not only for researchers from the Slovak Republic, as well as experts from other countries. The goal is to build a multidisciplinary, creative, highly competitive, and inspiring environment for conducting cutting edge research to develop glasses for a variety of applications. Continuous education and training through extensive scientific exchange programs and the creation of international doctoral degree programs issuing double diplomas with project partner institutions will ensure that scientists and Ph.D. students from the Centre develop the desired qualifications.

Prof. Boccaccini, who will oversee activities in the biomaterials department in the new Centre says: “This new international effort will generate innovative collaborative international research projects in the field of glass science and technology, establishing of a new scientific network of excellence. Ph.D. students and post-docs will benefit enormously from the opportunities offered by scientific exchanges within this European collaboration.”

A kick-off meeting for the new Centre in Trenčín on March 7-8, 2017, included authorities from the Ministry of Education, Science, Research and Sports of the Slovak Republic, representatives of the European Commission, authorities of the Alexander Dubček University of Trenčín, and international partners from Germany, Spain, and Italy.

Author

Eileen De Guire

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