€9M joint investment for US-Ireland R&D Programme
News and Events
- UCD Engineering Spin-out Secures €6 Million to Accelerate Development of Groundbreaking Blood Flow Tech
- CDIC Automotive Design Competition 2024
- Teaching and Learning Awards
- Aisling Ní Annaidh recognised as a pioneer in her field through an ERC Consolidator Award
- Highly Cited: UCD researchers named amongst 2024’s most influential
- ESTEEM Graduate Programme
- Scientists’ next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS
- Competition! Celebrating John Stewart Bell’s Legacy
- Minister O’Donovan announces €26million for 40 research projects
- Engineering Class of 1958
- Professor Anding Zhu elected IEEE MTT-S President
- Bridges and Bytes – Launching the Student Voice on AI and Assessment
- European Research Council Funds Cutting-Edge Irish Research into Microplastics and Traumatic Brain Injury
- Professor Finola O'Kane appointed as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks
- SBFE research fellow Xiaohui Lin receives the MSCA DOROTHY COFUND award
- Upskill with UCD’s engineering micro-credentials
- Minister O’Donovan announces funding boost for early career researchers
- Recent Lab visit by UCD Engineering & Architecture to Sheffield University Diamond Centre
- UCD Stormwater Runoff Research featured in Nicola Haines Team
- Madeleine Lowery among UCD Researchers recognised in SFI Frontiers for the Future Awards
- UCD’s LaNua Medical Wins Big Ideas Award at Enterprise Ireland’s Start-Up Day 2024
- Robotics Competition
- Congratulations to All the Winners of this years NovaUCD Awards
- Irish National Doctoral Research Cohort on Floating Offshore Wind Dynamic Cables is formed
- UCD and Northeastern University extend and deepen long-standing partnership with five collaborative research projects
- EPA announces €14.3M in new research funding
- Arup Scholarship Awards 2024
- UCD names new Vice-President for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
- Project promoting safe staffing in the healthcare system wins UCD Research Impact Competition
- VOICE Project Launches to Shape Tomorrow's Sustainability
- Archives
- 2023 News Archive
- 2022 News Archive
- Arup Scholarship Presentation 2022
- UCD wins Higher Education Partnership of the Year Award at the Asia Matters Business Awards
- Dr Amiya Pandit wins the Thomas Mitchell Medal
- Prestigious award for UCD team tackling stillbirth prevention
- Major milestone on Ireland’s journey into space
- RIBA Stirling Prize 2022
- University College Dublin Engineering Spin-out Shortlisted for Ireland Leg of the 2022 KPMG Global Tech Innovator Competition
- Irish Government invests in 47 projects to engage and inspire the public about STEM
- Irish-led international education project to grow understanding of the bioeconomy in society
- €16m energy system research partnership to decarbonise energy sector
- UCD spin-out PlasmaBound completes €2.35m funding round
- Home retrofits may need to be re-done in ten years, Oireachtas committee hears
- Unprecedented success for UCD in ERC Advanced Grant 2021 competition
- Visiting Professor announcement
- Research to Literally Get Under the Skin of Things
- Six UCD researchers awarded SFI Industry RD&I Fellowships
- University College Dublin and Queen’s University Belfast to Strengthen Collaboration
- UCD Engineers Among NovaUCD’s 2022 Innovation Awardees
- New Approaches may Uncover How the Brain Forms Decisions
- Serendipity Swings Doors of Opportunity Open Wide for Nanobubble Generator Developers
- Making Building on Sand a Realistic Option
- €9M joint investment for US-Ireland R&D Programme
- New Approaches to Plasma Therapy may Improve Medical Implant Outcomes
- Assessing Flood Risk Awareness Contributes to Environmental Policy Formation
- International Women's Day
- Supporting Climate Action Through Tree Planting recognised in UCD Research Impact Competition
- Helping People Understand and Mitigate the Spread of Aerosol-Born Infections
- Research that Directly Addresses the Climate Crisis
- Research teams chosen to find disruptive ideas for Irish Defence Forces
- Pan-European 'supergrid' could cut 32% from energy costs, says new UCD study
- Gas Hydrates – a Potential New Fuel Source or a Cause of Mass Extinctions
- Springer publishes book to mark retirement of Emeritus Professor Mohamed Al-Rubeai
- Strategies to Keep the Taps Running, Whatever Happens
- Shining the Food Safety Spotlight on Viral Contamination in Food
- Empowering People to Address the Problems of Climate Change
- AgTechUCD Announces Winners of Inaugural Accelerator Programme for AgTech and FoodTech Start-ups
- 2021 News Archive
- 2020 News Archive
- 2019 News Archive
- 2018 News Archive
- 2017 News Archive
- 2016 News Archive
- Building the State
- A Centenary Celebration
€9M joint investment for US-Ireland R&D Programme
Tuesday, 15 March, 2022
A joint investment of €9 million was today announced through a tripartite research and development partnership between the United States of America (USA), Republic of Ireland (RoI) and Northern Ireland (NI), spanning 16 research institutions. The seven awards will support more than 14 research positions in the Republic of Ireland and 10 research positions in Northern Ireland for three to five years.
The funding agencies involved in the awards being announced today are Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) in the Republic of Ireland; the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the USA, and the Department for the Economy (DfE) in Northern Ireland. The Health Research Board (RoI), the Health & Social Care R&D Division (NI) and National Institutes of Health (USA) have also been cofounding partners in the programme.
One of the awards was granted to energy sustainability project ‘Intelligent Data Harvesting for Multi-Scale Building Stock Classification and Energy Performance Prediction,’ led by Dr James O’Donnell, UCD School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering. Partnering on the project are Professor Neil Hewitt, University of Ulster and Professor Wangda Zuo, University of Colorado Boulder.
The project aims to reduce residential building energy consumption and related greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and other environmental impacts through the development of a novel tool chain for building owners and policymakers.
The tool chain will recommend complementary solutions for predicting GHG potential reductions. It will be enabled by harvesting non-uniform datasets from various sources and automatically generating building energy prediction models at multiple scales, using physics-informed machine learning.
Dr O’Donnell said: “This project is a unique and exciting opportunity to integrate expertise in the areas of energy modelling, energy informatics and green engineering, through the creation of a unique decision support tool aimed at policymakers and home owners, and that can be used across the three countries.”
By collaborating with the major stakeholders, the project will have a broad range of real world socioeconomic and environmental impacts to all three jurisdictions, include the ability to inform decision makers - such as policy makers, local planners, and building architects and operators -based on trustworthy, explainable results.
Commenting on the announcement, Director General of Science Foundation Ireland, Professor Philip Nolan said: “I am delighted to congratulate all of the award recipients and their collaborators. These are world-class research projects, driving innovation with the potential to greatly benefit our collective societies and economies. The US-Ireland R&D Partnership Programme demonstrates the strong collaborative relationship between our countries, encouraging globally-relevant scientific discovery across borders.”
Also welcoming the announcement, Director of the US National Science Foundation, Dr Sethuraman Panchanathan said: “The US-Ireland R&D Partnership Programme provides a unique opportunity to advance research on a global scale. I am delighted to congratulate the awardees collaborating across the Atlantic, who are working to create future world-class technological innovations.”
The overall goal of the US-Ireland Research and Development Partnership, launched in July 2006, is to increase the level of collaborative research and innovation amongst researchers and industry professionals across the three jurisdictions. The unique collaboration aims to generate valuable discoveries and innovations which are transferable to the marketplace, or will lead to enhancements in health, disease prevention or healthcare.
Director of Higher Education in the Department for the Economy, Northern Ireland, Trevor Cooper said: “The US-Ireland R&D Partnership is playing a key role in driving forward Northern Ireland’s economic vision for a ‘10x Economy’ which champions greater collaboration and innovation to deliver a ten times better economy with benefits for all our people. ‘10x Economy’ recognises that international collaboration is a key feature of the Northern Ireland research landscape and fundamental to driving both economic impact and social advancement. This flagship trans-Atlantic partnership is crucial to delivering this vision.”
The 16 collaborating institutions are University College Dublin (UCD), Trinity College Dublin (TCD), National University of Ireland Galway (NUIG), Munster Technological University (MTU), Tyndall National institute (TNI), and Dublin City University (DCU) in the Republic of Ireland; Queen’s University Belfast (QUB) and Ulster University (UU) in Northern Ireland; and University of Pennsylvania, Virginia Tech, University of Colorado Boulder, Arizona State University, Harvard University, Pennsylvania State University, Ohio State University, and Rensselaer Polytechnic University in the United States.
For more information on the programme, visit www.sfi.ie/funding/funding-calls/us-ireland-rd-partnership.
The six other US-Ireland Research Partnership awards were granted to:
'Mechanics of the Formation and Function of 2D Material Pleats - An Integrated, Multidisciplinary Study,'led by Prof Graham Cross (TCD), with Dr Gareth Tribello (QUB) and Prof Robert Carpick (University of Pennsylvania).
'Strained Engineered Germanium Quantum-Well Laser on GaAs and Si for Nanoscale Photonics,' led by Dr Tomasz Ochalski (Munster Technological University), with Supriya Chakrabarti (University of Ulster) and Prof Mantu Hudait (Virginia Tech ), and the Tyndall National Institute.
'A unified framework for the emulation of classical and quantum networks,' led by Prof Marco Ruffini (TCD), with Prof Mauro Paternostro (QUB), Dr Boulat Bash (University of Arizona ) and Prof Prineha Narang (Harvard University).
'Design of Genetically Engineered Tensile Load-Bearing Soft Tissues Inspired by Embryonic Tendon Development,' led by Prof Paula Murphy (TCD), with Prof Nicholas Dunne (DCU), Prof Helen McCarthy (QUB) and Prof Spencer Szczesny (Pennsylvania State University).
'Sensor Application to Peatland Hydrology in Remote Environments,' led by Dr Tiernan Henry (NUI Galway), Dr Raymond Flynn (QUB) and Prof Berry Lyons (Ohio State University).
'Ultrasensitive Nitrogen Sensor using Imprinted Polymer Assisted Bacteria for Real-Time Monitoring of Water Quality,'led by Prof Noel O’Connor (DCU), with Dr Panagiotis Manesiotis (QUB) and Dr Rick Relyea and Dr Shayla Sawyer (Rensselaer Polytechnic University).