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Leonardo (United Kingdom)

Leonardo (United Kingdom)

31 Projects, page 1 of 7
  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/T028475/1
    Funder Contribution: 6,123,270 GBP

    The sensing, processing and transport of information is at the heart of modern life, as can be seen from the ubiquity of smart-phone usage on any street. From our interactions with the people who design, build and use the systems that make this possible, we have created a programme to make possible the first data interconnects, switches and sensors that use lasers monolithically integrated on silicon, offering the potential to transform Information and Communication Technology (ICT) by changing fundamentally the way in which data is sensed, transferred between and processed on silicon chips. The work builds on our demonstration of the first successful telecommunications wavelength lasers directly integrated on silicon substrates. The QUDOS Programme will enable the monolithic integration of all required optical functions on silicon and will have a similar transformative effect on ICT to that which the creation of silicon integrated electronic circuits had on electronics. This will come about through removing the need to assemble individual components, enabling vastly increased scale and functionality at greatly reduced cost.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L015110/1
    Funder Contribution: 4,040,800 GBP

    The Scottish Doctoral Training Centre in Condensed Matter Physics, known as the CM-DTC, is an EPSRC-funded Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) addressing the broad field of Condensed Matter Physics (CMP). CMP is a core discipline that underpins many other areas of science, and is one of the Priority Areas for this CDT call. Renewal funding for the CM-DTC will allow five more annual cohorts of PhD students to be recruited, trained and released onto the market. They will be highly educated professionals with a knowledge of the field, in depth and in breadth, that will equip them for future leadership in a variety of academic and industrial careers. Condensed Matter Physics research impacts on many other fields of science including engineering, biophysics, photonics, chemistry, and materials science. It is a significant engine for innovation and drives new technologies. Recent examples include the use of liquid crystals for displays including flat-screen and 3D television, and the use of solid-state or polymeric LEDs for power-saving high-illumination lighting systems. Future examples may involve harnessing the potential of graphene (the world's thinnest and strongest sheet-like material), or the creation of exotic low-temperature materials whose properties may enable the design of radically new types of (quantum) computer with which to solve some of the hardest problems of mathematics. The UK's continued ability to deliver transformative technologies of this character requires highly trained CMP researchers such as those the Centre will produce. The proposed training approach is built on a strong framework of taught lecture courses, with core components and a wide choice of electives. This spans the first two years so that PhD research begins alongside the coursework from the outset. It is complemented by hands-on training in areas such as computer-intensive physics and instrument building (including workshop skills and 3D printing). Some lecture courses are delivered in residential schools but most are videoconferenced live, using the well-established infrastructure of SUPA (the Scottish Universities Physics Alliance). Students meet face to face frequently, often for more than one day, at cohort-building events that emphasise teamwork in science, outreach, transferable skills and careers training. National demand for our graduates is demonstrated by the large number of companies and organisations who have chosen to be formally affiliated with our CDT as Industrial Associates. The range of sectors spanned by these Associates is notable. Some, such as e2v and Oxford Instruments, are scientific consultancies and manufacturers of scientific equipment, whom one would expect to be among our core stakeholders. Less obviously, the list also represents scientific publishers, software houses, companies small and large from the energy sector, large multinationals such as Solvay-Rhodia and Siemens, and finance and patent law firms. This demonstrates a key attraction of our graduates: their high levels of core skills, and a hands-on approach to problem solving. These impart a discipline-hopping ability which more focussed training for specific sectors can complement, but not replace. This breadth is prized by employers in a fast-changing environment where years of vocational training can sometimes be undermined very rapidly by unexpected innovation in an apparently unrelated sector. As the UK builds its technological future by funding new CDTs across a range of priority areas, it is vital to include some that focus on core discipline skills, specifically Condensed Matter Physics, rather than the interdisciplinary or semi-vocational training that features in many other CDTs. As well as complementing those important activities today, our highly trained PhD graduates will be equipped to lay the foundations for the research fields (and perhaps some of the industrial sectors) of tomorrow.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D057558/1
    Funder Contribution: 117,724 GBP

    A sightline system encompasses all subsystems and algorithms necessary for accurate target tracking, pointing and stabilisation of a sensor line-of-sight. Each system integrates technologies obtained from several established research domains. The strategic intention of this research proposal is to develop sightline control as an independent, coherent research topic for the first time in the UK. The first step in achieving this objective is to apply rigorous research methodology to two of the most important sightline control problems / nonlinear nadir control and long-range imaging.The airline industry is severely hit by the economic after effects of terrorist actions (as seen post 9/11). There is therefore a need to adopt technologies that will safeguard aircraft security when operating in high-risk areas. One of the key military aircraft defence technologies identified by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security as a priority transition to the civil sector is the Directed Infra-Red Countermeasures (DIRCM) system (a technology in which the UK is a significant stakeholder). The purpose of such systems is to defend friendly aircraft against the threat posed by Man-Portable Air Defence Systems (MANPADS) / typically shoulder-launched Surface-to-Air Missiles (SAMs) / by tracking the incoming IR-guided missile and confusing the guidance mechanism through delivery of a jamming signal onto the missile seeker. However, for gimballed sightline systems, there exists a pointing angle that, were the target to pass through, infinite rate demands would be sent to one of the axes. This is known as the nadir and introduces significant additional tracking error, which is potentially disastrous for the aircraft. It is the intent of this project to investigate the applicability of several advanced control algorithms, using predictive methods, to minimising tracking error around the nadir and so improve the survivability of the aircraft.To obtain high-resolution images it is essential that sightline jitter be minimised, as jitter is often the dominant contributor to roll-off of the image modulation transfer function (MTF) at high spatial frequencies (blurs-out fine detail in the image). Jitter can be decomposed into two further sub-groups comprising sightline motion introduced by mechanical imperfections in the steering system (notably friction and vibration) and aberrations external to the system introduced by atmospheric turbulence. Control solutions for reducing mechanical jitter have been well researched, using, for example, classical control, friction estimation and robust methods, but very little nonlinear controller activity has been documented. The astronomical community has used adaptive optics for several years to correct for atmospheric distortions in the image by measuring the wavefront and using this information to control an extremely fast deformable mirror. However the complexity of such systems makes them unsuitable for deployment in an airborne environment. The alternative approach proposed here is to investigate the mapping between sightline jitter under nonlinear control and the shape of the MTF. The resulting controllers will, for the first time, be directly coupled to the quality of image obtained, which should see significant improvements in the attenuation of mechanical jitter while simultaneously taking the first steps in researching image-based atmospheric correction.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S022821/1
    Funder Contribution: 5,111,550 GBP

    In a consortium led by Heriot-Watt with St Andrews, Glasgow, Strathclyde, Edinburgh and Dundee, this proposal for an "EPSRC CDT in Industry-Inspired Photonic Imaging, Sensing and Analysis" responds to the priority area in Imaging, Sensing and Analysis. It recognises the foundational role of photonics in many imaging and sensing technologies, while also noting the exciting opportunities to enhance their performance using emerging computational techniques like machine learning. Photonics' role in sensing and imaging is hard to overstate. Smart and autonomous systems are driving growth in lasers for automotive lidar and smartphone gesture recognition; photonic structural-health monitoring protects our road, rail, air and energy infrastructure; and spectroscopy continues to find new applications from identifying forgeries to detecting chemical-warfare agents. UK photonics companies addressing the sensing and imaging market are vital to our economy (see CfS) but their success is threatened by a lack of doctoral-level researchers with a breadth of knowledge and understanding of photonic imaging, sensing and analysis, coupled with high-level business, management and communication skills. By ensuring a supply of these individuals, our CDT will consolidate the UK industrial knowledge base, driving the high-growth export-led sectors of the economy whose photonics-enabled products and services have far-reaching impacts on society, from consumer technology and mobile computing devices to healthcare and security. Building on the success of our CDT in Applied Photonics, the proposed CDT will be configured with most (40) students pursuing an EngD degree, characterised by a research project originated by a company and hosted on their site. Recognizing that companies' interests span all technology readiness levels, we are introducing a PhD stream where some (15) students will pursue industrially relevant research in university labs, with more flexibility and technical risk than would be possible in an EngD project. Overwhelming industry commitment for over 100 projects represents a nearly 100% industrial oversubscription, with £4.38M cash and £5.56M in-kind support offered by major stakeholders including Fraunhofer UK, NPL, Renishaw, Thales, Gooch and Housego and Leonardo, as well as a number of SMEs. Our request to EPSRC for £4.86M will support 35 students, from a total of 40 EngD and 15 PhD researchers. The remaining students will be funded by industrial (£2.3M) and university (£0.93M) contributions, giving an exceptional 2:3 cash gearing of EPSRC funding, with more students trained and at a lower cost / head to the taxpayer than in our current CDT. For our centre to be reactive to industry's needs a diverse pool of supervisors is required. Across the consortium we have identified 72 core supervisors and a further 58 available for project supervision, whose 1679 papers since 2013 include 154 in Science / Nature / PRL, and whose active RCUK PI funding is £97M. All academics are experienced supervisors, with many current or former CDT supervisors. An 8-month frontloaded residential phase in St Andrews and Edinburgh will ensure the cohort gels strongly, and will equip students with the knowledge and skills they need before beginning their research projects. Business modules (x3) will bring each cohort back to Heriot-Watt for 1-week periods, and weekend skills workshops will be used to regularly reunite the cohort, further consolidating the peer-to-peer network. Core taught courses augmented with specialist options will total 120 credits, and will be supplemented by professional skills and responsible innovation training delivered by our industry partners and external providers. Governance will follow our current model, with a mixed academic-industry Management Committee and an independent International Advisory Board of world-leading experts.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D045304/1
    Funder Contribution: 417,913 GBP

    The increasing complexity of tasks required by communication, radar, aircraft, automotive systems benefits from the use of novel materials in high speed devices. Such devices, for example, radio-frequency (RF) transistors used in mobile communication base stations or phased array radars, have to meet certain performance standards. Electrical characterization is mostly used today to tackle challenges in the device development process to meet these standards. Electrical measurements, however, determine average device properties rather than specific information on spatial characteristics such as temperature and electric field inhomogeneities. If direct imaging of temperature and electric field distribution over a device area was possible with high time resolution this would open a new dimension for the investigation of semiconductor devices. This would be of great benefit to device researchers and developers to study and tackle time-dependent phenomena limiting device performance. Adequate techniques, however, are not existent at present. In the proposed work we will develop the first high-spatial resolution time-resolved thermal prober for semiconductor device imaging ever built to our knowledge. Electric field distribution will be extracted from the temperature information. The technique will be illustrated on the example of the topical AlGaN/GaN HFETs to learn more about how these devices operate in detail and what limiting factors for current devices are. For example, we will obtain information about carrier trapping related to AlGaN/GaN HFET current collapse, but experience shows that other interesting and potentially important discoveries are likely to result as well.

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