We are pleased to announce that after a thorough internal and external review process, 4 Proto-IRG, 2 MTBG, and 3 EMRG awards have been selected to fund exceptionally promising, innovative materials research on campus through the 2018 OSU Materials Research Seed Grant Program.
The OSU MRSGP provides internal research funding opportunities through three distinct Funding Tiers designed to achieve the greatest impact for seeding and advancing excellence in materials research of varying scopes. It is jointly funded and managed by the Center for Emergent Materials (CEM), the Center for Exploration of Novel Complex Materials (ENCOMM), and the Institute for Materials Research (IMR).
2018 Proto-IRG Grants
Proto-IRG Grants ($80,000 each) form new Interdisciplinary Research Groups (IRGs) that could potentially be incorporated into the renewal proposal of Center for Emergent Materials, an NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center, in 2019.
- Structure, Defects and Emergent Properties at Magnetic Interfaces
Jinwoo Hwang, Department of Materials Science and Engineering - Metamorphic Narrow Gap Antimonide Materials for Topological Insulators
Sanjay Krishna, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering - Tunable Ferromagnetic and Antiferromagnetic Spintronics Based on Graphene Quantum Hall States
Jeanie Lau, Department of Physics - Anionic Functional Materials
Yiying Wu, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
2018 Multidisciplinary Team Building Grants
MTBG Grants ($60,000 each) support multidisciplinary materials research teams to compete effectively for federal block-funding opportunities
- Sulfide-Based Lithium Superionic Conductors (LISICON) for All Solid-State Energy Storage Device
Jung Hyun Kim, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering - MOCVD Growth and Material Properties of Earth Abundant Semiconducting ZnSnN
Hongping Zhao, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
2018 Exploratory Materials Research Grants
EMRG Grants ($40,000 each) enable nascent and innovative materials research to emerge to the point of being competitive for external funding
- Mechanoelectric effects on bone mineralization as a stiffness modulator
Hanna Cho, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering - Investigation of Boron-Based III-V Compound Semiconductors
Tyler Grassman, Department of Materials Science and Engineering - Establishing Computational and Experimental Frameworks to Elucidate Magnetoelastic Interactions in Smart Metamaterials
Ryan Harne, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering