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Case Western Reserve University Awarded
Science And Technology Center by NSF
The National Science Foundation (NSF) has announced
that it will establish a prestigious multimillion-dollar
research center at Case Western Reserve University,
effective August 1. The new NSF Science and Technology
Center at Case, named the Center for Layered Polymeric
Systems (CLiPS) at the Case School of Engineering, will
be a powerful national presence for research at the
crossroads of polymer science and engineering with the
physical sciences (called "polymers plus"),
and for education of a diverse American workforce that
can meet the challenges of emerging multidisciplinary
polymer-based technologies.
This is the first-ever NSF Science and Technology Center
awarded to the university.
CLiPS will receive approximately $19 million from NSF
over the first five years. The lifetime of a center
is usually 10 years with a total funding of around $40
million. Case and its partners will have the opportunity
to reapply after four years to renew funding for CLiPS
for a second five year period.
Science and Technology Centers are awarded competitively
by NSF across all disciplines. During this round of
competition, out of more than 160 competitors, only
six centers were funded. Among the six new centers,
CLiPS is the only center to be funded in the physical
sciences and engineering. Including the six new centers,
there are currently 17 Science and Technology centers
operating at academic institutions in the United States.
"Teamwork, strategic planning and implementation,
and synergy are key factors in the success of the new
NSF Science and Technology Centers," said Nathaniel
G. Pitts, director of the NSF Office of Integrative
Activities. "Each has multiple partners from different
science and engineering sectors, including national
and international academia, industry, and federal, state
and local government. The partners will enable the centers
to take advantage of complex agendas that require special
modes of operation. The full diversity of the nation's
intellectual talent will be engaged, and the expectation
is that new knowledge will be one of the primary products,
as will be the development of new instrumentation, new
technologies, and future scientists and engineers."
Anne Hiltner, the Herbert Henry Dow Professor of Science
and Engineering in Case's department of macromolecular
science and engineering, will serve as principal investigator
and director of the center.
"We are honored to receive this prestigious award
from the National Science Foundation," Hiltner
said. "These centers are awarded on a very competitive
basis, and only to the top research institutions in
the nation. This is confirmation of the research strength
at Case and our partner institutions."
According to Hiltner, the goal is for CLiPS to lead
the nation with an integrated program of research and
education through a distinctive microlayering and nanolayering
process created at Case during the last 20 years. This
forced-assembly process brings together dissimilar polymers
and other materials to produce hierarchical structures
that are otherwise unattainable. The CLiPS approach
strategically integrates polymer science and engineering
with research in nanotechnology, optics, laser physics,
membranes, biomedical engineering and other scientific
disciplines in the "polymers plus" concept.
Under the pioneering leadership in the 1960s and 1970s
Eric Baer, former department chair and current Leonard
Case Professor in the department of macromolecular science
and engineering, Case established internationally recognized
research and educational programs in polymer science
and engineering. CLiPS, which evolved out of this platform
of excellence at Case, will partner with Fisk University,
a historically black university in Nashville, Tenn.,
and The University of Texas at Austin, as well as enter
into an educational partnership with the Cleveland Municipal
School District.
To complement its pioneering research programs, CLiPS
will be a model for successful recruitment of diverse
American students into the science and engineering workforce.
A full research and education partnership between Case
and Fisk will broaden participation of African American
students in the science and technology programs at both
universities. The Case-Fisk Alliance will serve as a
compelling model for expanding relationships between
Historically Black Colleges and Universities and research
universities. The center's faculty will also engage
students from the Cleveland Municipal School District
in the exploration of polymer science and engineering
as academic pursuits and eventual careers. CLiPS has
established affiliations with regional non-Ph.D.-granting
schools that offer strong undergraduate science and
engineering programs to stimulate enrollment of American
students in CLiPS graduate programs.
"Just as important, we look for this center to
develop new technologies that will spur Ohio's and other
industries nationwide, as well as encourage high school
and college students from diverse ethnic backgrounds
to pursue careers in engineering and science,"
said John L. Anderson, Case's provost and university
vice president. "The Case School of Engineering
has developed an outstanding group in polymer research
and is collaborating with some of the top polymer researchers
in the world. Case and its partners will be major players
in the coming decades in global polymer research."
In addition to The University of Texas at Austin, Fisk
University and the Cleveland Municipal School District,
Case has other partners in this endeavor, including
the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg,
Miss.; Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio; Rose-Hulman
Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Ind.; the State
University of New York at Fredonia; the Rochester Institute
of Technology, Rochester, N.Y.; and the Naval Research
Laboratory in Washington, D.C.
NSF Science and Technology Centers explore new areas
of advanced research in the technological sectors of
our economy. These centers build bridges between academic
and other institutions in the nation, and offer the
research community an effective mechanism through which
long-term scientific and technological research results
can be transferred in a timely fashion to serve the
needs of society.
Visit www.case.edu

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