Category: Joint ventures/collaborations

  • Solar Cells Built to Power Portable Devices in Low Light

    Chemistry researchers at University of Warwick in the U.K. and Molecular Solar Ltd., a Warwick spin-off company in nearby Coventry, created an organic solar cell that generates enough power to recharge a lithium-ion battery directly and can work in various levels of light, including partial shade. The team led by Warwick professor Tim Jones (pictured…

  • University/Company Team Develops Nanomaterial Analytic Tools

    Engineering researchers from University of Illinois in Urbana and Anasys Instruments Inc. in Santa Barbara, California developed analytical tools to measure and analyze nanoscale manufactured products, such as those used in electronic devices, solar cells, and medical diagnostics. The findings from the team led by Illinois engineering professor William King (pictured right) appear in the…

  • Sanofi, Mass. General to Partner on Cancer Treatments

    The global pharmaceutical company Sanofi and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston agreed to collaborate on translational research into treatments for cancer involving blood and solid (organ-related) tumors. The parties did not disclose financial aspects of the two-year deal. The partnership aims to maximize the strengths of academic and corporate labs; Mass General is a teaching…

  • AstraZeneca Licenses Kidney Disease Complications Treatment

    AstraZeneca, a global pharmaceutical company based in the U.K., agreed to license a compound to treat complications of chronic and end-stage kidney disease from Ardelyx in Fremont, California. The deal that provides AstraZeneca with an exclusive worldwide license has a value of at least $272.5 million. Ardelyx develops small molecule drugs that restrict absorption in…

  • GE Expands Geron Corp. Stem Cell Licensing Deal

    GE Healthcare, a division of General Electric Company, is expanding its licensing agreement with biopharmaceutical company Geron Corp. in Menlo Park, California for stem cell tests used in drug discovery. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. In 2009, Geron agreed to license its human embryonic stem cells technology to GE Healthcare for the…

  • USPTO to Station Staff on Cornell New York Tech Campus

    The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) will assign a staff member to the New York City campus of Cornell University, a technology institute being developed in partnership with Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. This USPTO staffer is expected to serve individuals and institutions in the greater New York City region. The USPTO’s Innovation and Outreach…

  • University, Companies to Build Medical Analytics Platform

    University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, with four corporate technology partners, will build a comprehensive medical analytics database, integrating data from 200+ diverse research, clinical, and business sources. The two-year project is expected to cost $100 million and include the companies Oracle, IBM, Informatica, and dbMotion. Financial details of the corporate contributions were not disclosed. The…

  • Visual Simulation Method Developed for Liquid Movements

    Computer scientists at University of Copenhagen and two other institutions in Denmark created a new and more precise method for visualizing the movement of liquids. The team led by Copenhagen computer graphics professor Kenny Erleben (pictured right), with colleagues from Technical University of Denmark and Alexandra Institute in Aarhus, Denmark presented their findings at this…

  • BASF, Max Planck Institute Open Joint Carbon Materials Lab

    The chemical company BASF and Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research opened a joint Carbon Materials Innovation Center at BASF’s Ludwigshafen, Germany site. The three-year collaboration is expected to cost some €10 million ($US 12.9 million). A 12-member task force from both organizations will research the scientific principles and potential applications of innovative carbonized materials,…

  • Buffalo, Zimbabwe Universities Partner on Nanotech Medicines

    University at Buffalo in New York and two universities in the southern African nation of Zimbabwe will collaborate on a new nanotechnology research program in pharmacology. University of Zimbabwe in Harare and the Chinhoyi University of Technology in Mashonaland West, working with Buffalo’s Institute for Lasers, Photonics, and Biophotonics, along with New York State Center…