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| [April 24, 2012] |
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University of Utah Students Win $100,000 with Quantum Dot Technology
SALT LAKE CITY --(Business Wire)--
Quantum (News - Alert) dots might be the next big thing in the electronic industry.
Scientists are just starting to understand the uses for these man-made,
semiconductor nanocrystals. Quantum dots can emit a wider range of light
with less energy than existing materials, so many believe they will be
used in future generations of solar panels, televisions, cell phones and
related products.
One of the biggest challenges for advancing quantum dots is the
manufacturing process. Conventional processes are expensive, require
high temperatures and produce low yields. However, researchers at the
University of Utah believe they have a solution. They recently formed a
startup company called Navillum Nanotechnologies, and their efforts are
gaining national attention with help from a team of M.B.A. students from
the David Eccles School of Business.
The students recently won first place and $100,000 at the regional CU
Cleantech New Venture Challenge. The student competition concluded at
the University of Colorado in Boulder on Friday, April 20. The student
team advances to the national championship, which will be held in June
in Washington, D.C. Student teams from six regions will compete for
additional prizes and recognition at the prestigious event. Other
regional competitions were held at MIT (News - Alert), Cal Tech, the University of
Maryland, Clean Energy Trust (Chicago) and Rice University. All the
competitions are financed by the U.S. Department of Energy.
The prize money for the winning team of David Eccles M.B.A. students
Ryan Tucker, Chris Lewis and Ameya Chaudhari will be used by Navillum to
refine and increase the scale of its manufacturing process.
"The win reflects on the organizations we have at the University of Utah
to support entrepreneurship," Tucker said. "It also helps me get excited
that even as students, we can do great things."
The students started the project through the Pierre and Claudette
Lassonde New Venture Development Center, which is part of the David
Eccles School of Business. The Lassonde Center links faculty inventors
with graduate students, who write business plans for them. The Energy
Commercialization Center also helped mentor the team.
The researchers behind Navillum are in the Department of Chemistry at
the University of Utah. They are Michael Bartl (associate professor),
Jacqueline Siy-Ronquilo (post-doctoral fellow) and Nikko Ronquillo
(M.D./Ph.D. student).
"The M.B.A. students from the Lassonde Center are invaluable for this
endeavor," Siy-Ronquillo said. "They worked hard this past year to
research and write Navillum's business plan. They also came up with the
winning formula to present our technology at the CU Cleantech New
Venture Challenge. We look forward to continue partnering with them. We
also welcome other researchers to collaborate and further expand the
uses of quantum dots. We are willing to provide our quantum dots for
testing cutting-edge technologies."
Navillum competed against teams from nine states in the CU Cleantech New
Venture Challenge. Other finalists were from the University of Colorado
at Boulder, the University of Colorado at Denver and the Maharishi
University of Management (Fairfield, Iowa). The Utah team won because of
their superior technology and business plan, according to Steve
Herschleb, an M.B.A. student in Boulder and program manager of the
competition.
"It was the attractiveness of the technology and the growth potential,"
Herschleb said. "There's a little bit of risk; the market hasn't fully
embraced the technology. But the applications, from a scientific basis,
are very promising, and the market is expected to be enormous in the
future."
Quantum dots were first discovered in the 1980s, and researches are just
starting to discover the best ways to use them. They are tiny
semiconductors that emit photons when excited. About 4 million of them
would fit across the diameter of a penny. The color of light they emit
depends on the dot's size. Small dots produce light toward the blue side
of the spectrum; large dots produce light toward the red side.
The material has a growing number of applications. Navillum focused on
applications related to solar technology and energy efficiency to win
the CU Cleantech New Venture Challenge. Quantum dots can dramatically
increase the amount of energy captured by solar panels and decrease the
amount of energy needed for displays on cell phones and TVs, according
to Navillum.
But the cost of quantum dots has been a major challenge to widespread
use. Currently, a gram can cost $2,500 to $10,000. The high cost is due
to conventional processes, which are inefficient and difficult to scale.
This is the gap Navillum hopes to fill. Its process uses lower
temperatures and produces less waste than the traditional process. The
team hopes it will become an industry standard, helping lower costs and
drive broader use.
Navillum is well on its way to commercial success. In addition to the
$100,000 from the CU Cleantech New Venture Challenge and potential for
more at the national competition, it has received $155,000 in grants
from the University of Utah, the Utah Governor's Office of Economic
Development (GOED) and the Utah Science Technology and Research
initiative (USTAR).
"This team is a perfect example of the extraordinary projects under way
at the University of Utah," said Jack Brittain, vice president for
Technology Venture Development at the University of Utah. "Their success
demonstrates the exceptional talent we have in Utah, the programs and
people we have to drive them forward, and the unrivaled student
opportunities we offer. These opportunities exist because of the
incredible vision of Pierre Lassonde and his commitment to supporting
exceptional learning experiences for our students."
Learn more about the regional competition at cucleantech.com/nvc/.
Learn about the national competition at bit.ly/HDQug1.
Learn about technology commercialization at the University of Utah at www.techventures.utah.edu.
Learn about the Lassonde Center at www.lassonde.utah.edu.

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