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Agency |
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Rita Allen Foundation Scholars Program |
N/A |
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Rita Allen Foundation (RAF) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 20, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
Rita Allen Foundation Scholars Program
Agencies
Rita Allen Foundation (RAF)
Description
The Rita Allen Foundation Scholars program funds basic biomedical research in the fields of cancer, immunology and neuroscience. The Foundation also supports an award for scholars in pain research, who are selected in collaboration with the American Pain Society. Learn more about the Rita Allen Foundation Award in Pain here. The Rita Allen Foundation Scholars program has supported more than 150 scientists since 1976. The program embraces innovative research with above-average risk and groundbreaking possibilities. Scholars have gone on to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, the National Medal of Science, the Wolf Prize in Medicine and the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences.
Scholars can receive up to $110,000 per year for a maximum of five years. Scholars in Pain Research can be granted $50,000 per year for up to three years.
Rita Allen Foundation Scholar grant funds may only be used for direct project expenses, including up to 50 percent of the Scholar’s compensation.
ELIGIBILITY:
To be eligible for a Rita Allen Foundation Scholars Award, candidates must be nominated by an invited institution and have completed their training and provided persuasive evidence of distinguished achievement or extraordinary promise in research in one of the relevant fields (cancer, immunology, neuroscience or pain). United States citizenship is not a requirement; however, awardees must be legally employed at a U.S. degree-granting or research institution that is an invited participant in the Rita Allen Foundation Scholars Program. Awards are made to the 501(c)(3) organization; awards are not made to an individual. Scholars must perform research at a non-profit institution in the U.S. during the entire period of Rita Allen Foundation support.
Institutions should consider the following when considering whom to nominate for the Rita Allen Foundation Scholars program:
Candidates should be independent investigators in the early stages of their careers and research.
The caliber of early-stage investigators suggests nominees would be appointed to tenure-track positions at their respective institutions.
It is preferable that candidates be in the first three years of their tenure track. (This is taken into consideration in the rating of applications by the Scientific Advisory Committee.)
A senior postdoc should not be a candidate; wait until s/he is in a tenure-track position, as described.
Associate professors should not be candidates.
Candidates must have received committed startup funds from their respective institutions.
Candidates must have lab space from their institutions.
Applicants with committed awards that overlap the first two years of the Rita Allen Foundation Scholars Program from the Beckman Young Investigator Program, Kimmel Scholar Award, Pew Scholars Program in Biomedical Sciences and Searle Scholars Program are not eligible. Other sources of funding may influence selection.
Nominating institutions should consider the highly competitive nature of the Rita Allen Foundation Scholars program and submit their strongest nominee for consideration. The Rita Allen Foundation requests that eligible institutions share with us a description of the process they follow to nominate candidates.
Further questions regarding the Rita Allen Foundation Scholars program should be directed to those responsible for the internal nominating process within a given eligible institution.
More Information
http://ritaallen.org/scholars/#faq-list
Submission Limits
Only one nominated candidate per eligible institution is accepted per year.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 20, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Nov 4, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 18, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 20, 2017
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IUSE / Professional Formation of Engineers: REvolutionizing engineering and computer science Departments (IUSE/PFE: RED) |
NSF 17-501 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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Title
IUSE / Professional Formation of Engineers: REvolutionizing engineering and computer science Departments (IUSE/PFE: RED)
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
In FY 2017, NSF is continuing a program aligned with the Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE) framework: REvolutionizing engineering and computer science Departments. This funding opportunity enables engineering and computer science departments to lead the nation by successfully achieving significant sustainable changes necessary to overcome longstanding issues in their undergraduate programs and educate inclusive communities of engineering and computer science students prepared to solve 21st century challenges.
In 2014, ENG launched an initiative, the Professional Formation of Engineers (PFE), to create and support an innovative and inclusive engineering profession for the 21st century. At the same time, in 2014, NSF launched the agency-wide Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE) framework, which is a comprehensive effort to accelerate improvements in the quality and effectiveness of undergraduate education in all STEM fields. The RED program was first offered in FY 2015 as a PFE initiative aligned with the IUSE framework. Additional programs have been created within the IUSE framework across NSF, such as the IUSE: EHR program within EHR.
Even as demographic and regional socio-economic factors affect engineering and computer science departments in unique ways, there are certain tenets of sustainable change that are common across institutions. For instance, the development and engagement of the entire faculty within a department are paramount to the process, and faculty must be incentivized. Departmental cultural barriers to change and to inclusion of students and faculty from different backgrounds must be identified and addressed. Finally, coherent technical and professional threads must be developed and woven across the four years, especially (1) in the core technical courses of the middle two years, (2) in internship opportunities in the private and public sectors, and (3) in research opportunities with faculty. These and other threads aim to ensure that students develop deep knowledge in their discipline more effectively and meaningfully, while at the same time building their capacities for 21st century and "T-shaped" professional skills, including design, leadership, communication, understanding historical and contemporary social contexts, lifelong learning, professional ethical responsibility, creativity, entrepreneurship, and multidisciplinary teamwork. It is expected that, over time, the awardees of this program will create knowledge concerning sustainable change in engineering and computer science education that can be scaled and adopted nationally across a wide variety of academic institutions. The research on departmental change that results from these projects should inform change more broadly across the STEM disciplines.
Note: The RED program is offered in alignment with the NSF-wide undergraduate STEM education initiative, Improving Undergraduate STEM Education (IUSE). More information about IUSE can be found in the Introduction of this solicitation. The IUSE/PFE: RED program will hereafter be referred to as RED.
Prospective PIs are encouraged to consider the IUSE: EHR program for projects that are outside the scope of RED (see https://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=505082). Specifically, the Institutional and Community Transformation (ICT) track promotes innovative approaches to using research to catalyze change that addresses challenges across and within institutions (institutional transformation), as well as within and across specific disciplines (community transformation).
Prospective PIs are strongly discouraged from submitting identical or substantially similar proposals to RED and IUSE: EHR.
More Information
https://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2017/nsf17501/nsf17501.htm?WT.mc_id=USNSF_25&WT.mc_ev=click
Submission Limits
Limit on Number of Proposals per Organization: 2
An organization is allowed up to two submissions per competition.
Limit on Number of Proposals per PI or Co-PI: 1
An individual may serve as PI or co-PI on only one submission per competition.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 20, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Nov 4, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 11, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Dec 9, 2016 |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 18, 2017
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Jeffress Trust Awards Program in Interdisciplinary Research |
N/A |
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Thomas F. and Kate Miller Jeffress Memorial Trust (Jeffress) |
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Eligibility:
Applicants must:
• Work as a fullâ€time faculty member at a nonâ€profit academic or
research institution in Virginia
• Have completed no more than seven years since their first faculty
appointment as of June 30, 2016
• Propose a project in an eligible research area, including astronomy,
biosciences, chemistry, computer sciences, engineering,
environmental sciences, material science, mathematics and physics
Note: Inforamtion regarding the 2017 competition will be released in October. Dates below are approximate.
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 13, 2016 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Jeffress Trust Awards Program in Interdisciplinary Research
Agencies
Thomas F. and Kate Miller Jeffress Memorial Trust (Jeffress)
Description
The Jeffress Memorial Trust was founded in 1981 by Robert M. Jeffress in memory of his parents, Thomas F. and Kate Miller, and is guided by its mission to benefit the people of Virginia and their research in chemical, medical or other scientific fields.
The Jeffress Trust Awards support high impact, innovative one-year projects that integrate computational and quantitative scientific methodologies across a broad range of scientific disciplines.
The Jeffress Trust Program provides $100,000 awards as seed funding to support one-year pilot studies that encourage the development of innovative interdisciplinary strategies that integrate computational and quantitative scientific methodologies across a broad range of scientific disciplines. Up to four applications will be accepted from each nonprofit academic or research institution in Virginia, nominated through their own internal selection process.
Eligible research areas for Jeffress support include astronomy, biosciences, chemistry, computer sciences, engineering, environmental sciences, material science, mathematics and physics. Research in social, economic and behavioral sciences, including psychology, are currently outside the scope of Jeffress funding.
Full-time faculty at institutions in Virginia that are within seven years of their first faculty appointment are eligible to apply as Principal Investigators. Student participation is a requirement of the proposed research plan.
Please note: Faculty from medical schools and schools of Osteopathic Medicine may not apply as Principal Investigators; however, they are encouraged to collaborate as Co-Investigators.
More Information
https://hria.org/tmf/jeffress/
Submission Limits
4 per institution.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 13, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 31, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 21, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 19, 2017
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T Cell Reagent Research for the Study of Allergic Diseases (U19) |
RFA-AI-16-027 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 13, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
T Cell Reagent Research for the Study of Allergic Diseases (U19)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
The purpose of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to support studies to understand the role of allergen epitope-specific T-cell responses in the pathogenesis and treatment of allergic diseases by utilizing allergen epitope-specific reagents. The FOA will also support novel T-cell epitope identification, characterization and validation of important food allergens and aeroallergens that have not been previously studied.
More Information
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-AI-16-027.html
Submission Limits
Only 1 application per institution is allowed as defined in Section III. 3. Additional Information on Eligibility.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 13, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Nov 4, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 18, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Feb 3, 2017 |
Agency Proposal |
Mar 3, 2017
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NEA Poetry Out Loud: 2018 National Finals Competition |
NEAPS1604 |
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National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 13, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
NEA Poetry Out Loud: 2018 National Finals Competition
Agencies
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA)
Description
Through this Program Solicitation, the National Endowment for the Arts seeks a Cooperator to produce and administer the 2018 Poetry Out Loud National Finals competition to take place April 23-25, 2018 in Washington, DC.
The National Finals are the culmination of the nationwide Poetry Out Loud (POL) program that encourages more than 365,000 high school students each year to learn about classic and contemporary poetry through memorization and performance. Students select, memorize, and recite poems from an anthology and compete for the title of National Poetry Out Loud Champion. Through a pyramid structure competition, winners advance from classroom recitation contests to school-wide competitions, then to the state competitions and, ultimately, to the National Finals. One student from every state, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico travel to the National Finals to compete for the national championship.
Poetry Out Loud is supported by many partners. The National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation support the day-to-day administration of the program, create educational materials, and fund awards for both state and national finals. State arts agencies facilitate the implementation of the program in high schools nationwide and organize state competitions during the school year. The Cooperator selected through this Program Solicitation will work with the National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation to produce the National Finals competition and coordinate other aspects of the program.
More Information
https://www.arts.gov/sites/default/files/Poetry-Out-Loud-with-Instructions-Sept2016.pdf
Submission Limits
An organization may submit only one proposal under this program solicitation.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 13, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 31, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 4, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 5, 2017
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Population Dynamics Centers Research Infrastructure Program FY 2017 (P2C) |
RFA-HD-17-007 |
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National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 13, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
Population Dynamics Centers Research Infrastructure Program FY 2017 (P2C)
Agencies
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Description
The purpose of this funding opportunity announcement (FOA) is to advance the field of population dynamics research by increasing research impact, innovation, and productivity; develop junior scientists; and maximize the efficiency of research support.
More Information
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/rfa-files/RFA-HD-17-007.html
Submission Limits
Only one application per institution is allowed, as defined in Section III. 3. Additional Information on Eligibility.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 13, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Nov 4, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Nov 28, 2016 |
Agency Proposal |
Dec 28, 2016
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Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund - Matching Funds Program |
N/A |
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Commonwealth Research and Commercialization Fund (CRCF) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 6, 2016 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund - Matching Funds Program
Agencies
Commonwealth Research and Commercialization Fund (CRCF)
Description
Matching Funds Program
The Matching Funds Program assists qualified organizations in commercializing qualified research or technologies and/or leveraging federal and private funds designated for commercialization. Target CRCF projects offer high potential for commercialization and economic benefit to Virginia. A one-to-one match is required.
Qualified applicants for the Matching Funds Program must be a:
Virginia public or private institution of higher education or its associated intellectual property foundation
Federal research facility located in Virginia
University research consortium that includes Virginia college and university member institutions
Other nonprofit research institution located in Virginia
Applications must leverage federal or private funding designated for commercialization and:
Be tied to expansion or commercialization activity in an existing program; or
Fulfill a matching funds requirement for proposals to non-Commonwealth of Virginia funding sources, to be submitted by March 31, 2017, and for which CIT must be notified within two (2) business days of the award decision; or
Be tied to projects for which awards from non-Commonwealth of Virginia funding sources have been made, but required matching funds have not been secured.
Award cap: $100,000
More Information
http://www.cit.org/initiatives/crcf/fy2017-solicitation-preview/
Submission Limits
Organizations may submit up to four (4) Matching Funds Program LOIs/applications during this solicitation, and a Principal Investigator may submit up to two (2).
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 6, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 7, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Nov 10, 2016 |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 19, 2017
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Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund - Eminent Researcher Recruitment Program |
N/A |
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Commonwealth Research and Commercialization Fund (CRCF) |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Oct 6, 2016 Has Passed — [All slots are filled]
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Title
Commonwealth Research Commercialization Fund - Eminent Researcher Recruitment Program
Agencies
Commonwealth Research and Commercialization Fund (CRCF)
Description
The Eminent Researcher Recruitment Program assists public institutions of higher education in the Commonwealth acquire or enhance research superiority in qualified technologies by supporting the recruitment of a top scholar to the faculty of that institution. A one-to-one match is required. Examples of how CRCF funds may be used include for start-up package support, supplies, equipment, or upgrades to the researcher's laboratory.
Qualified applicants for the Eminent Researcher Recruitment Program must be a:
Virginia public institution of higher education or its associated intellectual property foundation
The following are acceptable recruitment scenarios:
Candidate selected: the university has identified the candidate to hire and intends to make a formal offer
Multiple candidates under consideration: the university has identified multiple candidates for recruitment who would strengthen the university in similar ways
Candidate profiled: the university has detailed the profile of the candidate to be recruited
Award cap: $250,000
More Information
http://www.cit.org/initiatives/crcf/fy2017-solicitation-preview/
Submission Limits
Organizations may submit up to one (1) Eminent Researcher Recruitment Program LOI/application during this solicitation.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Oct 6, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Oct 7, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
Nov 10, 2016 |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 19, 2017
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Scalable Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems |
NSF 16-604 |
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National Science Foundation (NSF) |
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The Scalable Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems (SNM-IS) solicitation is changed from the previous Scalable Nanomanufacturing (SNM) solicitation in that the objective has shifted from research in large-scale manufacturing of single-component nanomaterials and nanostructures to investigations in scalable nanomanufacturing and integration of multi-component nano-enabled integrated systems. The emphasis is to frame proposals in the context of the realization of integrated systems for the eventual economic manufacture of demonstrably useful nano-enabled products in high volume or customized products in low volume, responsibly and safely. An integrated system is a system that combines different functions together to work as one entity. System integration is the process of assembling component subsystems such that the subsystems function together as a system.
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Sep 29, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
Scalable Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems
Agencies
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Description
The National Science Foundation (NSF) announces a 7th (seventh) year of a solicitation on collaborative research and education in the area of Scalable Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems (SNM-IS). This solicitation is in response to and is a component of the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) Signature Initiative: Sustainable Nanomanufacturing - Creating the Industries of the Future (http://www.nano.gov/NSINanomanufacturing).
Many nanofabrication techniques have demonstrated the ability to synthesize small quantities of nanomaterials and nanostructures for characterization and evaluation and simple nanodevices for analysis and testing purposes. The emphasis of the Scalable Nanomanufacturing for Integrated Systems (SNM-IS) solicitation is on research in new nano-scale manufacturing concepts and integration methods to realize complex integrated systems based on nanotechnology. The research will focus on overcoming the key scientific and engineering barriers that prevent the translation of laboratory-scale discoveries in nano-enabled integrated systems to an industrially relevant scale, reliably, affordably and within sustainability and environmental, health and safety (EHS) guidelines. The goal of the SNM-IS solicitation is to study and formulate the fundamental principles of scalable nanomanufacturing and integration for nanotechnology-based integrated systems towards the eventual manufacture of useful nano-enabled products.
The SNM-IS solicitation is driven by the discovery of numerous new nanomaterials with unique properties (2D atomic layer, transition metal dichalcogenides, van der Waals heterostructures, perovskites, metal-organic frameworks, metamaterials, origami, etc.) in recent years and invention of many novel fabrication methods (nano additive manufacturing, strain engineering processing, bio-nanomanufacturing, etc.) to synthesize nanostructures with different geometries, 'microstructures' and functionalities. These nanomaterials and nanostructures need to be assembled into larger-scale components and devices, which, in turn, need to be integrated into higher-order subsystems and systems so novel and useful products can be made for a variety of applications in the areas of functional and structural materials, mechanics, optics, electronics, chemical, biomedical, catalysis, environmental, energy, sensing, security, defense, etc. Integration will need to be across material sets (0D, 1D, 2D, 3D, hierarchical nanoparticles, etc.), across length-scales (molecular to nano to micro to meso to macro), and across function (mechanical, electrical, optical, chemical, biological, thermal, etc.) and across processes (top-down, bottom-up). Integration will involve the study and implementation of hybrid manufacturing and assembly processes and methods. The research will be driven by the need to understand and establish, among others, design rules for integrated systems, manufacturing and integration process and control models, and measurement science and technology. The desired outcome will be a nano-enabled integrated system that combines many different functions together to work as one entity and that is made up of component subsystems that are designed to perform in a unified manner.
The SNM-IS solicitation seeks proposals that investigate novel scalable nanomanufacturing and integration methods for nano-enabled integrated systems with a clear commercial relevance. Proposals should consider addressing key aspects of the nanomanufacturing value chain comprised of nano-scale building-blocks → complex nanomaterials and nanostructures → functional components and devices → integrated sub-systems and systems:
Novel nanomanufacturing processes and integration strategies for large-area or continuous manufacturing or customized manufacturing of nano-scale materials and structures and their assembly into larger-scale components and devices and the integration of the components and devices into higher order structures, subsystems and systems;
Fundamental scientific research in key, well-defined technical areas that are compellingly justified as approaches to overcome critical scientific and engineering barriers to nanomanufacturing scale-up, customized nanomanufacturing and multi-scale integration; and
Design principles for production systems leading to nanomanufacturing tools, and platforms; identification of manipulation and control methodologies, and metrology, instrumentation, and standards needed for process monitoring and control and to assess quality and yield; determination of process models and simulations to guide processing and integration; identification of environmental and energy footprints, as applicable.
Competitive proposals will incorporate the following three elements in their research plans:
A persuasive case that the nano-enabled integrated system to be manufactured has or is likely to have sufficient demand to justify eventual scale-up or meet demands for low-volume specialty materials or device systems;
A clearly identified set of research challenges requiring science and engineering solutions that must be addressed to enable the realization of integrated systems for the cost-effective manufacture of high quality nano-enabled products in large quantities or low-volume specialty products; and
A compelling research plan with clear objectives and approaches to overcome the identified research challenges. This may include environmentally benign approaches and life-cycle considerations.
These elements should be carefully explained and justified in proposals, since both the scientific novelty and the feasibility of the methods being researched will be important evaluation factors.
The SNM-IS solicitation is NOT seeking research proposals in large-scale manufacturing of single component nanomaterials and nanostructures.
More Information
http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2016/nsf16604/nsf16604.htm
Submission Limits
An academic institution – a university, or a campus in a multi-campus university -- may submit no more than one (1) proposal on which it is the lead organization in response to this solicitation. Potential PIs are advised to contact their institutional office of research regarding processes used to select proposals for submission. The same organization may be a collaborative partner in any number of other multi-organization group proposals in which it is not the lead. A proposal involving more than one organization must be submitted as a single proposal in which a single award is requested, with the managing principal investigator from the lead organization and subawards administered by the lead organization to any other participating organizations.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Sep 29, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
Sep 30, 2016 |
Internal Pre-proposal |
Oct 14, 2016 |
Results of Internal Competition |
Oct 21, 2016 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Jan 13, 2017
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2017 Blavatnik National Awards - Chemistry |
N/A |
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Blavatnik Family Foundation |
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Notice of Intent Deadline of Sep 22, 2016 Has Passed
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Title
2017 Blavatnik National Awards - Chemistry
Agencies
Blavatnik Family Foundation
Description
The Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists recognize the country’s most promising faculty-rank researchers in Life Sciences, Physical Sciences & Engineering, and Chemistry. One Blavatnik Laureate in each disciplinary category will receive $250,000 in unrestricted funds. Eligibility The nominee must: - Have been born in or after 1975. - Hold a doctorate degree (PhD, DPhil, MD, DDS, DVM, etc.). - Currently hold a faculty position at an invited institution in the United States. - Currently conduct research as a principal investigator in one of the disciplinary categories in Life Sciences, Physical Sciences & Engineering, or Chemistry.
More Information
http://blavatnikawards.org/media/filer_public/76/35/7635f5f2-87bd-46a1-941e-ebd204737977/2017_blavatnik_national_awards_guidelines.pdf
Submission Limits
Candidates for the 2017 Blavatnik National Awards must be nominated by their institutions. Each institution may submit up to three nominations, one in each disciplinary category of Life Sciences, Physical Sciences & Engineering, and Chemistry.
Deadlines
Internal Notice of Intent |
Sep 22, 2016 |
Notification of Internal Competition |
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Internal Pre-proposal |
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Results of Internal Competition |
Oct 14, 2017 |
Agency Notice of Intent/Pre-proposal |
N/A |
Agency Proposal |
Nov 16, 2016
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Anyone wishing to submit a proposal for one of these programs should click on the appropriate link in the list above. To expedite the process of planning an internal competition, please submit your notice of intent as soon as you know you have an interest in the funding program. You are only required to include the name of the Principal Investigator, any co-PI's, and the subject or title of the proposed project. The deadline for the internal notice of intent is indicated above.