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UMass Amherst NanoManufacturing Expert Will Testify on Capitol Hill March 17

March 15, 2010

AMHERST, Mass. – A Congressional committee will hear this Wednesday where future funding should be spent to bolster nanomanufacturing when Mark Tuominen, a leading nanotechnology researcher at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, testifies before the House Committee on Science and Technology in Washington. The goal is to boost research and development and to foster university-industry partnerships, he says.

Tuominen was tapped for the March 17 hearing because he has 20 years of successful nanotechnology research experience and is chair of the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) National NanoManufacturing Network (NNN) as well as co-director of UMass Amherst’s Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing (CHM), which last year hosted a major summit for the nanomanufacturing community in Boston. Both the CHM and NNN aim to bring academic researchers, industry and government together to advance nanomanufacturing progress, Tuominen says.

In his testimony, he’ll address what the NSF is currently doing to support nanomanufacturing research and development, offer his opinion on areas that should be supported but that don’t receive funding now, and more broadly, what the government can do to support nanomanufacturing innovation. Tuominen says there are a few areas where government could do more, but the good news is that agencies already are aware of these and have modest projects already in place to meet the need. He’ll be specific about how and where to inject more funding.

Tuominen describes the UMass Amherst CHM and NNN’s role as bringing key players together for two reasons. First, “there are a lot of discoveries made at universities but most manufacturing companies don’t have the budget to support such efforts. Nevertheless they need to hear about the new knowledge. It’s important to bring these two communities together so companies can learn about all the new developments and basic researchers at the universities can hear about industry’s needs. These interactions are at the core of what we do.”

“We work hard to make sure these groups don’t sit isolated in their own little bubbles. To be fruitful and effective we need to meet each other and learn from each other.”

Nanomanufacturing, according to the NNN, is the use of value-added processes to control matter at the nanoscale in one, two and three dimensions for reproducible commercial-scale production. Areas where nanomanufacturing is being embraced aggressively right now, according to Tuominen, include magnetic data storage, lightweight batteries and high-efficiency solar cells. UMass Amherst is a research leader in all three, he adds.

Overall, the nanotechnology expert says he hopes to see a change in how we as a nation support manufacturing development. This area should get continuous research attention because there is a good possibility of continued improvement in benefits and rewards, which is good for the economy, provides good jobs and other “considerable societal benefits,” plus promotes sustainable manufacturing in the long run, he adds.

The only way to do this is to have the three partners, university researchers, industry and government working together, says Tuominen, because none can succeed as well alone. “We all will do a more effective job if we continue to communicate effectively, collaborate and move forward working together on these goals.”

“We in the universities are doing fundamental research on new nanomanufacturing techniques, which we hope industries will need. In turn, manufacturers have told us they want to see more targeted research in certain areas. The third partner, government agencies, would like to see more of this kind of collaboration, where universities are talking with industry and together we’re identifying manufacturing targets.”

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