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Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology

Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology

6 Projects, page 1 of 2
  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035089/1
    Funder Contribution: 7,909,260 GBP

    Quantum Technology is based on quantum phenomena that govern physics on an atomic scale, enabling key breakthroughs that enhance the performance of classical devices and allow for entirely new applications in communications technology, imaging and sensing, and computation. Quantum networks will provide secure communication on a global scale, quantum sensors will revolutionise measurements in fields such as geology and biomedical imaging, and quantum computers will efficiently solve problems that are intractable even on the best future supercomputers. The economic and societal benefit will be decisive, impacting a wide range of industries and markets, including engineering, medicine, finance, defence, aerospace, energy and transport. Consequently, Quantum Technologies are being prioritised worldwide through large-scale national or trans-national initiatives, and a healthy national industrial Quantum Technology ecosystem has emerged including supply chain, business start-ups, and commercial end users. Our Centre for Doctoral Training in Applied Quantum Technologies (CDT-AQT) will address the national need to train cohorts of future quantum scientists and engineers for this emerging industry. The training program is a partnership between the Universities of Strathclyde, Glasgow and Heriot-Watt. In collaboration with more than 30 UK industry partners, CDT-AQT will offer advanced training in broad aspects of Quantum Technology, from technical underpinnings to applications in the three key areas of Quantum Measurement and Sensing, Quantum Computing and Simulation, and Quantum Communications. Our programme is designed to create a diverse community of responsible future leaders who will tackle scientific and engineering challenges in the emerging industrial landscape, bring innovative ideas to market, and work towards securing the UK's competitiveness in one of the most advanced and promising areas of the high-tech industry. The quality of our training provision is ensured by our supervisors' world-class research backgrounds, well-resourced research environments at the host institutions, and access to national strategic facilities. Industry engagement in co-creation and co-supervision is seen as crucial in equipping our students with the transferable skills needed to translate fundamental quantum physics into practical quantum technologies for research, industry, and society. To benefit the wider community immediately, we will make Quantum Technologies accessible to the general public through dedicated outreach activities, in which our students will showcase their research and exhibit at University Open Days, schools, science centres and science festivals.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035801/1
    Funder Contribution: 8,223,410 GBP

    "Semiconductors" are synonymous with "Silicon Chips". After all Silicon supported computing technologies in the 20th century. But Silicon is reaching fundamental limits and already many of the technologies we now take for granted are only possible because of Compound Semiconductors (CS). These include The Internet, Smart Phones, GPS and Energy efficient LED lighting! CSs are also at the heart of most of the new technologies expected in the next few years including 6G wireless, ultra-high speed optical fibre connectivity, LIDAR for autonomous vehicles, high voltage switching for electric vehicles, the IoT and high capacity data storage. CSs also offer huge opportunities for energy efficiency and net zero. CSs are often made in small quantities and using bespoke techniques and manufacturers have had to put together functions by assembling discrete devices. But this is expensive and for many of the new applications scale-up and integration, along the lines of the Silicon Chip, are needed CDT research will involve the science of large scale CS manufacturing, manufacturing integrated CS on Silicon and applying the manufacturing approaches of Silicon to CS; it will generate novel integrated functionality and all with an emphasis on finding environmentally sustainable manufacturing methods. CIVIC PRIORITY: This CDT is a fundamental part of the strategic development of the CS Cluster centred in South Wales, and in linking it to activity across the UK. It is part of a wider training strategy including apprenticeships, MScs and CPD, to train and upskill the entire workforce. The latest skills requirements have been identified by partner companies and through working with Welsh Government, CSconnected and the CS Applications Catapult The partners support the CDT financially and with their time. This is because the limiting factor to rapid cluster growth is skilled people. The expected PhD level jobs increase for the existing cluster companies alone would mop up all the students trained by this CDT. We provide a £2k stipend top-up to maximise recruitment from all backgrounds. However, the CDT does more - clusters are about cross-fertilisation of people and ideas and the CDT combines academics from 4 universities with leading and complementary expertise in CS. We form teams of two academics from different universities, one industry supervisor and the PhD student to create and carry out each PhD. The CDT also ensures the whole cohort regularly works together to exchange new knowledge and ideas and maintain breadth for each student. The UK and Welsh administrations see CS as an opportunity to boost the economy with high technology jobs and the UK government uses the CDT as part of its pitch to overseas companies to locate here. APPROACH and OUTCOMES: a 1+3 program where Year 1 (Y1) is based in Cardiff, with provision via taught lectures and transferable skills training, hands on and in-depth practical training and workshops led by University and Industry Partner staff. Following requests from Y2-4 students the industry workshops are presented in hybrid format so all Y2-4 students can further benefit from this program and where we now cycle presenters, companies and specific topics over 3 years. A dedicated training clean room allows rapid practical progress in a supportive environment, learning from doing, experts and the rest of the cohort and then an industry facing cleanroom, co-located with industry staff and manufacturing scale equipment, where students learn the future CS manufacturing skills. This maximises exchange of ideas, techniques and approach and the potential for exploitation. Both students and industry partners have praised the practical skills this produces. Y2-Y4 consist of an in depth PhD project, co-created with industry and hosted at one of the 4 universities, and specialised whole cohort training and events, including energy audit, research ethics and innovative outreach

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Z532848/1
    Funder Contribution: 11,884,800 GBP

    "Semiconductors" are synonymous with "Silicon chips". After all Silicon supported computing technologies in the 20th century. But Silicon is reaching fundamental limits and already many of the technologies we take for granted are only possible because of Compound Semiconductors (CS). These include: the internet, smart phones and energy-efficient LED lighting! CSs are also at the heart of most of the new technologies envisaged, including 6G wireless, ultra-high speed optical fibre connectivity, LIDAR for autonomous vehicles, high voltage switching for electric vehicles, the IoT and high-capacity data storage. CSs also offer huge opportunities for energy efficiency and net zero. The CS Hub will contribute to "Engineering Net Zero", through products, such as energy-efficient electronics, and by introducing new environmentally-friendly manufacturing processes; to "Quantum Technologies", by creating practical implementations that can be manufactured at scale; to the "Physical and Mathematical Sciences Powerhouse" and "Frontiers in Engineering and Technology", through e.g. cutting-edge materials science and manufacturing-process innovation. CS materials are grown atom-by-atom on slices of crystalline material, known as substrates, which provide mechanical support for the resulting "wafer" during the next stage of fabrication. CSs are often made on relatively small substrates. Manufacturers have had to combine functions by assembling discrete devices but this is expensive. New approaches to integration in epitaxy and fabrication are required along with wafer-size scale-up for the new applications. Applications such as in quantum technology (QT) are pushing requirements for more accurate and highly reproducible manufacturing-processes. With such improvements CS will underpin the UK quantum industry and enable impact for the existing QT investments. We will create designs that are more tolerant to typical variations that occur during manufacturing; develop manufacturing processes that are more uniform and repeatable; create techniques to characterise performance part-way through manufacturing, create techniques to combine materials (e.g. CS grown atom-by-atom on Silicon) and combine functions on chip. We will study and implement ways to make CS manufacturing more environmentally friendly. We will make it easier to compare the environmental foot-print of different CS research and manufacturing-processes by making available relevant, high quality data in the form of accessible libraries of the resource and energy usage of the feedstocks and processes used in CS manufacturing. We aim to change the mind-set of UK academics. Our vision is that researchers think about the translation of their research from the beginning of the innovation process and about the requirements that next generation product manufacturers will face. As a critical factor in all future manufacturing, we aim to embed the philosophy of resource efficiency of the research itself, resource efficiency of the manufacturing process, as well as of the application it supports. We aim to repatriate and connect CS manufacturing supply chains to re-shore production and facilitate innovation, enabling development of holistic solutions. We will address the current staffing shortages of the CS industry by: providing leadership in improving career structure and enhancing training for Hub research and technical staff; putting in place the very best ED&I practice to create the most positive and inclusive working environment and promulgating this across the industry; inspiring the next generation of the CS workforce as well as spreading the news about the fantastic career opportunities currently available. By working closely with industry partners on all these aspects we will attract and retain staff in this critical UK manufacturing industry.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/X035360/1
    Funder Contribution: 5,326,500 GBP

    There is an urgent need for new power electronic technologies to underpin the transition to net zero. The imminent risks for our planet have been highlighted by UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change calling our current status 'code red' for human driven global heating in its scientific report published in 2021. Deploying power electronics in renewable generation systems enables smart control of grid networks and efficient energy utilization. This is also true of transportation, which in turn will support a dramatic reduction of the 72% of global primary energy consumption currently wasted world-wide. In this programme grant (PG), we develop a transformative next generation of Aluminium Gallium Nitride (AlGaN) Solid-State Circuit Breakers (SSCBs), with greatly improved efficiency and greater voltage range, to many kVs, enabling anticipated global energy savings >20% compared to continuing with current technologies. Circuit breakers are critical components for safe, reliable electrical power systems, including for power-electronics-dense grids, but a step-change in performance is needed. According to the major power electronics company ABB / Hitachi Energy, SSCBs are 'the weakest link in next-generation electricity infrastructure'. The slow response time of existing mechanical circuit breakers available on the market risks damaging sensitive equipment. The alternative use of Silicon (Si) - based SSCBs, although providing superior switching speed (<1 microseconds) versus mechanical circuit breakers (>100 microseconds), and offering the fast circuit protection critically needed for high-performance power distribution, presently suffer from high conduction losses and are often limited at best to 4-5 kV safe operation for a single chip. Higher voltage ranges are required in increasingly more complex and varied application areas including electric planes and ships. For example, Si-based SSCB inefficiencies would contribute up to an additional 600 Mtons of CO2 emissions per year if implemented in the global cruise liner industry alone. The vision and ambition is to address current roadblocks in power electronics by developing new SSCBs. The limitations in existing technologies can be largely eliminated using ultrawide bandgap AlGaN SSCBs, which conservatively have a 100x improvement in efficiency compared to existing commercial high-voltage devices such as Si insulated-gate bipolar transistors and Silicon Carbide (SiC) metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors, to enable efficient, compact SSCBs with minimal cooling requirements. In 20 years, it is expected that these highly efficient ultrawide bandgap AlGaN power electronic components will have displaced all other technologies such as Si and SiC for high-current high-voltage uses, e.g. in power distribution and transportation such as in trains, maritime and planes, helping enable a carbon neutral society. The underlying physical reason for the great benefit of using AlGaN is its much greater bandgap (up to 6.2 eV) compared to Si (1.1 eV) and SiC (3.2 eV). The commonly used power electronics Baliga Figure of Merit, i.e. the suitability of a material for power electronics, of AlGaN is nearly 1,800 compared to 1 for Si and 340 for SiC, enabling a revolution in what power electronics will be able to deliver. Many interlinked technological challenges need to be addressed, including AlGaN materials growth, and methods to enable large enough layer thicknesses, alongside the development and fabrication of new device concepts to achieve high performance and reliable AlGaN SSCBs. The PG will be driven by the realization of transformative device prototypes, with ever increasing complexity, challenge and innovation during the course of the PG, ultimately driving UK research in this area towards end-application prototypes. The high-power application space is huge, and developments will be steered by involving end-users in a co-creation role for the SSCB prototypes.

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  • Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035275/1
    Funder Contribution: 8,847,700 GBP

    The proposed CDT will address the UK's need for a pipeline of highly skilled scientists and engineers who will be able to secure the country's position as the global leader in the science and technology of two-dimensional materials (2DMs). Having started with the discovery of graphene at the University of Manchester, this research field now encompasses a vast number of 2DMs, 2DM-based devices, composites, inks, and complex heterostructures with designer properties. Numerous proposals for applications have emerged from research groups worldwide, some of them already picked up and being developed by big established companies and a large number of start-ups (30+ spin-outs just from the two partner universities, Manchester and Cambridge). Many of the ideas put forward require further research and validation and many more are expected to emerge, thanks to the unique properties of this new class of advanced materials and the ability to use modelling to predict new useful combinations of 2DMs or design conditions that bring about new properties. The CDT will support and enable new avenues of research and the development of 2DM-based technologies and work with industry partners to accelerate lab-to-market development of products and processes that leverage the exceptional properties of 2DMs. 2DMoT CDT will be an important part of graphene and 2D Materials eco-system centred on the Manchester and Cambridge innovation networks. It will contribute to the plans by the local authorities, in particular, of the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, to pilot Manufacturing Innovation Networks focused on graphene & nanomaterials, coatings and technical textiles. Industrial co-supervision of research projects will accelerate realisation of new products and technologies enabled by 2DMs, which is key to competitiveness. The CDT will implement a new approach to PhD research training by incorporating individual research projects into several overarching, multidisciplinary research missions with 2-3 CDT students a year joining each research mission, either at Manchester or Cambridge, and gradually forming 8-10 researcher teams incorporating CDT students at different stages of their PhD and involving several research groups with complementary expertise, working collaboratively and sharing ideas and knowledge. All students will have opportunities to shape their own projects and overall research missions, creating an inclusive environment, ideal for peer-to-peer learning and innovation. A 6-months-long formal taught programme at the start of PhD will be complemented by further advanced skills training during the research phase, transferrable skills training and research schools and workshops organised jointly with leading international research centres and the CDT business partners. Environmental sustainability of the developed products and technologies will be a focal point of the CDT programme, with specialist training and considerations of sustainability embedded in all research missions. Training in innovation and commercialization of research, project management, responsible research and innovation, and dealing with the media will be mandatory for all CDT students. To ensure that the benefits of CDT training are available to a wider group of PhD researchers, a range of CDT events - residential conferences, seminars, research workshops, commercialisation training - as well as some of the courses, will be open to non-CDT students whose research interests are aligned with the CDT research missions. Outreach events will form an important part of CDT activities, in particular participation in Science festivals, British Science weeks, Bluedot, Science X, with exhibits showcasing the science of 2DMs and their developing applications.

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