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Why is IP important to a Researcher at RIT?. Ryne P. Raffaelle Professor, Physics & Microsystems Engineering Director of NanoPower Research Laboratories Brian J. Landi PhD Student, Microsystems Engineering. Overview. Why? Research Duties Scientific Credibility Student Benefits
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Why is IP important to a Researcher at RIT? Ryne P. Raffaelle Professor, Physics & Microsystems Engineering Director of NanoPower Research Laboratories Brian J. Landi PhD Student, Microsystems Engineering
Overview • Why? • Research Duties • Scientific Credibility • Student Benefits • Financial Rewards • How? • Approach • NPRL Examples
Research Duties Research Commercialize Ideas IP Devices
Scientific Credibility - Grants • Synergy between Grant Proposal Writing and IP – “Secure IP” • Chicken & Egg: Qualifications to get money but money is needed to do work • Industrial partnerships for commercialization – technology transfer
Student Benefits • Education • Exposure of Technology in field – the business of science • Curriculum Vitae • Financial rewards
Financial Rewards • Technology Transfer to industry • Licensing • Collaboration for future grants • Personal Income $ $ $
Approach • Awareness of Professional Field • Conferences, Seminars, local chapters • Literature • Collaborations • Identifying a Need…is there a Demand? • Innovate a Novel solution • Incremental Improvement? • Paradigm Shift? • Cost effective? • Existing IP?
NPRL Examples: a-Voltaics Need: Microelectronic power supplies Demand: Microsystems, Remote sensing, long-lived sustainable batteries (pacemaker) Novelty: Nanomaterials afford utility-radiation tolerance and efficient luminescence
NPRL Examples: SWNTs Need: Solvent Dispersions and Separation Demand: Analysis, chemical reactions, phase-pure material (metallic vs. semiconducting) Novelty: Simple organic solvent – cost effective
NPRL Examples: QD-SWNTs Need: Additives for Polymeric Solar Cells Demand: Nanomaterials which can be dispersed in a conducting polymer to improve exciton dissociation and charge transport Novelty: Wavelength selective, high electron affinity, extraordinary electrical conductivity
Conclusions • IP can facilitate a researcher’s ability to be awarded grant money • IP development is synergistic with other research duties • Successful IP will allow for a revenue stream for the university lab and the researcher