STORAGE
Commercializing Academic Research
The William J. von Liebig Center for Entrepreneurism and Technology Advancement at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) has awarded $275,000 to six projects led by faculty members of the Jacobs School of Engineering. The projects range from bio-sensors to nano-photonics, and include technologies to create synthetic bone for use in dental implants or prosthetics; to put anti-virus and other Internet networking functions on auto-pilot; and to enable affordable, predictable and reliable wireless data services. This is the fourth round of so-called "gap" grants since the Center was set up to foster entrepreneurism education on the campus and to provide funding to internal technology projects that have strong commercial potential. The Center received 19 full applications. All of the applicants went through a rigorous screening mechanism and their proposals were reviewed by an external committee of industry experts. "This solicitation was extremely successful," said Joe Bear, executive director of the von Liebig Center. "All of the applications showed great promise, and while we were only able to make six cash awards, the von Liebig Center will now work with all applicants to develop commercialization strategies for their technologies, and if possible, help them secure other types of funding for their projects."
With the latest round, the von Liebig Center has awarded a total of more than $1.2 million in grants to 25 projects led by Jacobs School faculty.
Of the six new grants, two each went to faculty or researchers based in the Computer Science and Engineering, and Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering departments, and one each to professors in Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Bioengineering. For more information on the von Liebig Center, visit http://www.vonliebig.ucsd.edu, call (858) 822-5960 or email vlassist@soe.ucsd.edu. For information about previous awardees, go to http://www.vonliebig.ucsd.edu/Projects/current_projects.shtml.
Award Descriptions by Department:
BIOENGINEERING
Shu Chien, Professor and Yingxiao Wang, Postdoctoral Researcher
"Development and Application of Biosensors to Monitor Kinase Activity with
High Temporal and Spatial Resolution in Live Cells"
$25,000
Chien and Wang aim to establish the technology to monitor the activity in
live cells of specific kinases, and to apply it to different physiological
and pathological conditions, especially for the diagnosis of diseases such
as cancer. Kinases play a crucial role in a variety of cellular processes,
including cell division, angiogenesis, motility, and adhesion. Chien and
Wang have developed a biosensor capable of detecting kinase activity in
live cells based on an optical technology which allows the real-time
measurement of kinase activity with high temporal and spatial resolutions
in live cells. Preliminary experiments have demonstrated that this
biosensor reports kinase activity with high degrees of specificity and
sensitivity. With the von Liebig grant, they will conduct proof-of-concept
research on this biosensor and its potential as a powerful tool to
efficiently and conveniently diagnose the different developmental stages of
cancers, e.g. in a biopsy or a pap smear sample.
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COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Rajesh K. Gupta, Professor
"High-level Synthesis Using Aggressive Parallelization of System C Code"
$50,000
There have been numerous attempts in the past at creating an effective
high-level synthesis tool for designing integrated circuits directly from a
behavioral language. While each of them has its own merits, Gupta and his
team (in collaboration with Alex Nicolau and Nikil Dutt at UC Irvine) have
taken a novel approach to this challenge by using aggressive code
parallelization and motion techniques to discover circuit optimizations
beyond what is possible with traditional approaches. They have developed a
number of speculative code motion techniques and dynamic compiler
transformations that optimize the circuit quality in terms of cycle time,
circuit size, and interconnect costs. This grant will enable his team to
productize the tool by enabling it to interface to common industry formats,
linking it to simulation tools, and filing for appropriate intellectual
property rights.
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George Varghese, Professor
"NetControl: Setting the Internet on AutoPilot"
$50,000
As the Internet expands, it is taking more and more time to oversee the
networking technology that links it all together. Now, Varghese believes
that he has settled on new software systems that could effectively remove
human beings from the loop in certain key networking functions such as
controlling Internet attacks and spam. He is proposing to develop two new
software products that, according to one von Liebig reviewer, "represent
technology that could solve a real pain."
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ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING
Sujit Dey, Professor
"Enabling Affordable, Predictable, Reliable Wireless Data Services through
Adaptive Content Shaping"
$50,000
Next-generation wireless data networks are starting to offer new data
services. Additionally, wireless data devices (wirelessly-connected
laptops, PDAs and cell phones) are becoming more popular and
affordable. But delivery of wireless data to, as well as general Internet
surfing on, these devices is hampered due to limited bandwidth,
unpredictable error levels, and handheld constraints. Dey and his team
have developed techniques for shaping data dynamically as a function of
network and device conditions and constraints, resulting in a rich wireless
surfing experience. Wireless network operators as well as content
providers and aggregators already have expressed interest in this
technology. This grant will enable Dey and his team to make this software
more commercial-ready and add several advanced features.
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MECHANICAL AND AEROSPACE ENGINEERING
Prabhakar Bandaru, Assistant Professor
"Novel SiGe Processes and Devices for Nano-Photonics Applications"
$50,000
Experts in the photonics industry see potential in the integration of
Germanium-based optical components with conventional CMOS-based
electronics, allowing for the development of opto-electronic integrated
circuits with superior performance and functionality (compared to optical
or electronic circuits alone). With this grant, Bandaru hopes to
collaborate with an industry leader on further development and
commercialization of his technology to make a Germanium-on-Silicon
integrated photodetector capable of detecting 2.5 Gigabits per second.
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Kenneth S. Vecchio, Professor
"New Method to Create Synthetic Bone"
$50,000
The aim of this project is to refine a new method for creating synthetic
bone for biomedical applications such as dental implants and biocompatible
prosthetic interfaces. Vecchio recently developed a new method to convert
marine skeletal structures into new materials with a composition similar to
the structural basis of bone. These new materials have microstructural
architectures similar to the marine skeletons imparting excellent
mechanical properties, but possess bio-compatible constituents. This
project will focus on optimizing the conversion process to develop this new
material while maintaining the architecture structure required for
high-performance bone substitutes.
