Promoting the Formation of “Tsukuba Innovation Arena [TIA] nano
Cooperation by AIST, NIMS, the University of Tsukuba, and Industry to Create a World-Class R&D Center
2009.06.17
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
National Institute for Materials Science
University of Tsukuba
Three institutions located in Tsukuba, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, the National Institute for Materials Science, and the University of Tsukuba, have agreed to the aim of creating a world-class nanotechnology research and development center in Tsukuba City in cooperation with industry, and will establish an organization for promoting this project.
Key points
- Three institutions located in Tsukuba, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, the National Institute for Materials Science, and the University of Tsukuba, have agreed to the aim of creating a world-class nanotechnology research and development center in Tsukuba City in cooperation with industry, and will establish an organization for promoting this project.
- The facilities of the research and development center will be constructed using supplementary budgets for fiscal years 2008 and 2009, and the three parties will cooperate in promoting research and development and efforts to train human
- The center will provide a platform where persons involved in device research, materials research, graduate school education, and the fostering of industry can meet in a single place. The contribution of nanotechnology to industry and the development of human resources will be accelerated by unifying these activities.
Abstract
The facilities that will form the core of nanotechnology research and development will be constructed on the campuses of AIST and NIMS, which are located in Tsukuba City, using supplementary budgets of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) for fiscal years 2008 and 2009, amounting to approximately \36 billion ($375 million). Up to now, AIST, NIMS, and the University of Tsukuba had conducted research and development on the element technologies of nanotechnology independently. By creating these new core facilities and promoting cooperation among the three institutions, this project will enable interdisciplinary research on technologies in different fields desired by private businesses.
The mission of the above-mentioned “Administrative High Council” will be to assess the demand for research and development in industry and promote close cooperation between materials research and device research so as to enable effect use of the project’s core facilities, and to study the development of R&D human resources, centering on graduate schools, with the participation of Japan’s leading universities.
By creating this Tsukuba Innovation Arena, the partner institutions hope to provide support which will enable early industrial commercialization of the results of nanotechnology research in Japan, and the supply of those products to the market.