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European institutions join forces to establish cutting-edge functional glass research centre

Five European institutions have come together to establish a new research centrr in Trenčín, Slovakia, that specializes in cutting-edge functional glass research.

The project, Centre for Functional and Surface-Functionalized Glasses (FunGLASS), is based at the University of Trenčín, with participation from international groups in Germany, Italy, and Spain.

Alexander Dubček from the University of Trenčín (with coordinating professor Dusan Galusek) heads up the project. Project partners include Friedrich-Alexander from University Erlangen, Nürnberg, Germany (with A. Boccaccini); Friedrich Schiller from University of Jena, Germany (with L. Wondraczek); Institute of Ceramics and Glass of Spanish National Research Council, Madrid, Spain (with A. Duran); and University of Padova, Italy (with E. Bernardo).

Their work focuses on materials for personalized health care and energy-related issues, utilization of waste materials for production of glasses, glass–ceramics with high added value, and application of glass-based coatings in the automotive and machinery industries.

The goal of the project is to support training and education of young researchers and to establish an international graduate school issuing joint diplomas with project partners from high-performing European countries.

According to Dusan Galusek, the coordinating professor of the project, the centre is intended to expand the facilities (both personal and experimental) of the existing centre of excellence for ceramics, glass, and silicate materials (CEKSiM), established in Trenčín, Slovakia, in 2007. CEKSiM was founded as the Slovak national Centre of excellence in the field of ceramic, glass, and silicate materials in general, and its establishment was funded by the European Regional Development Fund with the sum of 4M€. They now intend to upgrade the national Centre to an internationally recognized and well-established entity.

It is a new type of European project included in the Horizon 2020 Program and focused on the design and development of a new Centre of excellence starting from the current Centre of glass in Trenčín. The NSF-IMI will be one of the models taken into account to define the goals and management of the new center.

“I want to emphasize that the establishment of the Centre and its full funding will be a subject of further evaluation. At the moment, the consortium only obtained a one-year grant for preparation of the business and financial plan for establishment of the new Centre. This is supposed to be completed by June 2016. The business plan will then be evaluated by the European Commission, and a decision made to provide further funding or not. In any case, there is a strong commitment of the Slovak government to fund the establishment of the Centre,” he said.

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