Houston,
TX | February 7, 2005
Rice University’s Center for Nanoscale Science and Technology
(CNST) today awarded its first grants from the Smalley/Curl
Fund for Innovation to faculty members Michael S. Wong,
Rebekah Drezek and Jason Hafner.
The
one-year, $15,000 grants are designed to provide faculty
with the seed funds they need to develop novel ideas
that have the potential of impacting all areas of
nanotechnology.
CNST’s
innovation fund was established in 2003 in honor of
Richard Smalley, University Professor, the Gene and
Norman Hackerman Professor of Chemistry and professor
of physics; and Robert Curl, University Professor,
the Kenneth S. Pitzer-Schlumberger Professor of Natural
Sciences and professor of chemistry. Professors Smalley
and Curl won the 1996 Noble Prize in Chemistry for
the discovery of fullerenes, the third major form
of carbon after diamond and graphite.
“Seed
funding is absolutely pivotal in generating the preliminary
data required to secure large federal grants,” said
Drezek, the Stanley C Moore Assistant Professor of
Bioengineering and assistant professor of electrical
and computer engineering. “Jason Hafner and I tremendously
appreciate the support provided by the Smalley/Curl
Fund for Innovation in helping us get our new project
off the ground.”
Jason
Hafner, assistant professor of physics and astronomy
and assistant professor of chemistry, and Drezek are
studying the synthesis, functionalization, and optical
properties of gold nanorods so that they may be used
in biomedical applications. They aim to develop bright,
biocompatible contrast agents that can “light up”
cells that are expressing specific molecular markers
indicative of early precancerous changes. With the
seed money from the Smalley/Curl Fund for Innovation,
Drezek and Hafner will evaluate targeted nanorods
as molecular probes for reflectance confocal microscopy
and optical coherence tomography—two real-time, high-resolution
optical imaging techniques.
“These
funds are very helpful, especially when one is starting
a new research group and developing new approaches
to current problems,” said Hafner.
Wong,
assistant professor of chemical engineering and assistant
professor of chemistry, is developing methods for
the self-assembly of hollow microcapsules by mixing
inert nanoparticles and polymers at room temperature.
Wong’s lab has learned to make these hollow capsules
with “patchy” surfaces, and they can attach molecules
to specific locations on those surfaces.
Placing
molecules on flat surface in a desired pattern is
difficult, and it is even more difficult to do so
on a curved surface. Wong's method will make it easier
to pattern molecular coatings on the capsule material.
Ultimately, he hopes to engineer these patchy capsules
for targeted drug delivery and other advanced encapsulation
applications.
“I
am thrilled to receive this honor in the first year
of its inception, and I look forward to carrying out
research with my students to achieve the vision set
out by Rick Smalley and Bob Curl for their award,”
said Wong.
CNST
officials say Rice, the Houston business community
and the general public all stand to benefit from the
innovation funding provided by the Smalley/Curl Fund
for Innovation.
“These
small grants are designed to bridge the gap between
ideas and proof of concept,” said CNST Director Wade
Adams. “In so doing, they allow our faculty to compete
for more substantial external funding, and that, in
turn, will lead to major new technologies for Houston’s
economic growth.
“Nanotechnology
will create entirely new industries in much the same
way that developments in information technology did
30 years ago,” said Adams. “Who knows which of these
bright ideas will turn into Houston’s next Compaq
or Texas Instruments? To ensure that Houston doesn’t
miss out on future opportunities, CNST continues to
build its endowment for the Smalley/Curl Fund and
to search for new ideas that have a high probability
of impacting the local economy.”
Rice
University is consistently ranked one of America’s
best teaching and research universities. It is distinguished
by its: size—2,850 undergraduates and 1,950 graduate
students; selectivity—10 applicants for each place
in the freshman class; resources—an undergraduate
student-to-faculty ratio of 6-to-1, and the fifth
largest endowment per student among American universities;
residential college system, which builds communities
that are both close-knit and diverse; and collaborative
culture, which crosses disciplines, integrates teaching
and research, and intermingles undergraduate and graduate
work. Rice’s wooded campus is located in the nation’s
fourth largest city and on America’s South Coast.
Contact:
Jade Boyd
(713) 348-6778
217 244-1073
jadeboyd@rice.edu
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© Rice University
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