
TKU
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2007 - 2009Partners:Nagoya Institute of Technology, TKU, UPM, University of Aveiro, ETU +26 partnersNagoya Institute of Technology,TKU,UPM,University of Aveiro,ETU,Nagoya Institute of Technology,Nagoya Institute of Technology,St Petersburg Electrotechnical Uni,Saint Petersburg State Electrotechnical University,IT Power,University of Aveiro,St Petersburg Electrotechnical Uni,Powerwave UK Ltd,National Institute for Materials Science,Technical University of Madrid,TU Wien,University of Manchester,NIMS,University of Salford,TUW,Research Centre Juelich GmbH,Hitachi (Japan),Tamkang University,Research Centre Juelich GmbH,IT Power,Hitachi Metals,Hitachi Metals,Nanyang Technological University,Research Centre Juelich GmbH,NIMS,NTUFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/F012403/1Funder Contribution: 151,216 GBPThe functional electroceramics market is multibillion pounds in value and growing year by year. Electroceramic components are vital to the operation of a wide variety of home electronics, mobile communications, computer, automotive and aerospace systems. The UK ceramics industry tends to focus on a number of specialist markets and there are new opportunities in sensors, communications, imaging and related systems as new materials are developed. To enable the UK ceramics community to benefit from the new and emerging techniques for the processing and characterisation of functional electroceramics a series of collaborative exchanges will be undertaken between the three UK universities (Manchester, Sheffield and Imperial College) and universities and industry in Europe (Austria, Germany, Russia, Czech Republic), the USA and Asia (Japan, Taiwan and Singapore). These exchanges will enable the UK researchers (particularly those at an early stage of their careers) to learn new experimental and theoretical techniques. This knowledge and expertise will be utilised in the first instance in the new bilateral collaborative projects, and transferred to the UK user communities (UK universities and UK industry). A number of seminars and a two day Workshop will be held to help the dissemination of knowledge.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2022Partners:Cardiff University, TKU, Durham University, Technical University of Munich, Cardiff University +33 partnersCardiff University,TKU,Durham University,Technical University of Munich,Cardiff University,UNIPR,Toshiba Europe Limited,Nat Synchrotron Radiation Res Ctr NSRRC,IBM,European Synch Radiation Facility - ESRF,Samsung Electronics Research Institute,Tamkang University,Università degli Studi di Parma,Institut Laue-Langevin,Samsung (United Kingdom),Seagate (United States),PSI,ILL,Science and Technology Facilities Council,Nat Synchrotron Radiation Res Ctr NSRRC,Diamond Light Source,Seagate Technology,University of Parma,Durham University,TUM,Samsung Electronics Research Institute,TREL,European Synchrotron Radiation Facility,National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center,Diamond Light Source,Diamond Light Source,Dalhousie University,Dalhousie University,ISIS Facility,ISIS Facility,Cardiff University,IBM (United States),Toshiba (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N032128/1Funder Contribution: 5,101,380 GBPTony Skyrme proposed that under special circumstances it is possible to stabilize vortex-like whirls in fields to produce topologically stable objects. This idea, effectively of creating a new type of fundamental particle, has been realised with the recent discovery of skyrmions in magnetic materials. The confirmation of the existence of skyrmions in chiral magnets and of their self-organization into a skyrmion lattice has made skyrmion physics arguably the hottest topic in magnetism research at the moment. Skyrmions are excitations of matter whose occurrence and collective properties are mysterious, but which hold promise for advancing our basic understanding of matter and also for technological deployment as highly efficient memory elements. Following the discovery of skyrmions in a variety of materials, several urgent questions remain which are holding back the field: what are the general properties of the phase transitions that lead to the skyrmion lattice phase, the nature of its structure, excitations and stability and how might we exploit the unique magnetic properties of this matter in future devices? These questions have only recently begun to be addressed by several large international consortia and are far from being resolved. For the UK to contend in this highly competitive field a major project is required that brings together UK experts in materials synthesis and state-of-the-art theoretical and experimental techniques. We propose the first funded UK national programme to investigate skyrmions, skyrmion lattices and skyrmionic devices. Our systematic approach, combining experts from different fields is aimed at answering basic questions about the status of magnetic skyrmions and working with industrial partners to develop technological applications founded on this physics.
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