|
Wilkes University to Design and Market
Nano-Particle Machine
We want our clothes to make us look good,
but can they make us smell good, too? Maybe so, according
to professors at Wilkes University who are hoping to
design a process that turns an ordinary piece of clothing
into a bacteria-killing blouse that senses body odor
or an infectious disease-sensing uniform that detects
the presence of a biological agent.
How? It’s all part of the brave new world of nanotechnology,
a growing industry that many U.S. companies are hoping
will revive their manufacturing capabilities and lead
to job creation.
The ability to coat fabrics with nano-particles
(or powders) allows for the creation of bio-functional
coatings for applications such as anti-bacterial fabrics
and bio-sensors that can do everything from warn you
when you are in the presence of a biological attack
to greatly improving fire retardant properties in all
kinds of fabrics, to monitoring blood sugar in sweat,
according to Wilkes engineering professor Ali Razavi.
Dr. Razavi and colleagues Dr. Don Mencer, associate
professor of chemistry; Dr. Jeffery Alves, distinguished
professor of free enterprise and entrepreneurship; Mr.
John Janecek, assistant professor of engineering, received
a $120,000 Keystone Innovation grant that will be matched
by Wilkes, to design and market a 12 inch roll-to-roll
machine capable of coating fabrics with nano-particles
of various materials. The project is scheduled to be
completed in 12 to 18 months.
Nano-powders are particles with a diameter of less than
1 micrometer or 1 millionth of a meter. A human hair
is said to be about 50 micrometers wide. That means
that these particles cannot been seen with the naked
eye because they are closer to the size of a virus.
The project doesn’t stop at the
prototype stage – the grant requires that the
product be brought to market by establishing a start-up
business with the possible name of Nano-Smart Processing
LLC Company. That entrepreneurial component also presents
a unique opportunity for undergraduates in the Jay S.
Sidhu School of Business and Leadership to become involved
in marketing the business.
“Students will be involved in both the development
and engineering of the product and in the commercialization,”
said Alves. “Next year’s entrepreneurial
students will be working to identify markets and competition.”
“This is another example of the power of collaboration
between the Northeastern Pennsylvania Technology Institute
and the region’s institutes of higher education,”
said Dr. Tim Gilmour, president of Wilkes University.
“We are excited about the possibilities of using
the intellectual power of our university to actually
jump start a regional industry.”
Several local companies expressed interest in the product
through letters supporting the grant application. Representatives
from Lockheed Martin, Cinram Manufacturing, and Fairchild
Semiconductor, all expressed interest in the project.
“Having local support for the research and product
gives us an extraordinary leg up in being successful,”
Alves said. “As a region, however, our biggest
problem is critical mass, which we don’t have.”
The University still has to work through issues of intellectual
property rights, said Mencer, who speculated this could
be the beginning of a new role for Wilkes -- helping
improve the local economy through the research and development
capabilities of its faculty.
“We have put our reputations on the line that
we can take this all the way from research and development
to large scale production to marketing the product,”
Razavi said. “We want to establish nanofabrication
in Northeastern Pennsylvania as a way of replacing many
of the manufacturing companies that have gone out of
business.”
Visit www.wilkes.edu

|
|