GRENOBLE,
France, Sept. 28 -- The European Commission (EC)
has launched a new project, Merging Optics and Nanotechnologies
(MONA), to coordinate research in those fields. The
project, which is part of the Sixth EU Framework
Programme for Research and Technological Development
(FP-6), will "leverage synergies in photonics and
nanotechnologies, seeking to increase the impact
and efficiency of investment on European research," the
commission said in a statement.
Six European countries and regions are involved in launching
MONA, under the leadership of CEA-LETI -- the Laboratory of Electronics and Information
Technologies, based in Grenoble, France, run by the French Atomic Energy Commission
(CEA). Also participating are industry and research organizations including Acreo,
a Swedish research and development optics and microelectronics company; Aixtron,
a German manufacturer of MOVPE (metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy and CVD (chemical
vapor deposition) equipment; Alcatel-Thales; ASM International, a Netherlands
supplier of semiconductor process equipment; the European Photonics Industry
Consortium (EPIC); INTEC (Department of Information Technology), Ghent University,
Belgium; Opticsvalley, a joint public-private association of Paris-based and
international optics companies, research laboratories and educational institutions;
Schott; VDI Technologiezentrum (VDI TZ) GmbH, a provider of laser and optical
technology consulting services; and Yole Développement, a French marketing
and technology consulting company.
The MONA project will coordinate FP-6 R&D programs among
relevant industries and with regional and national research programs in and outside
Europe and will create a common site for the exchange of information on research
and integrated projects in photonics and nanotechnologies. It will also promote
the exchange of scientific results, market development and technology needs through
MONA-developed workshops, and will develop a European roadmap for photonics and
nanotechnologies.
Also on MONA's agenda are an economic intelligence and market
survey, joint workshops, recommendations for research, dissemination of information,
tutorials and training for industry by nanotechnology experts, and annual conferences.
"The MONA project will bridge the gap between photonics and
nanotechnologies," the commission said. "The challenge of mastering nanoelectronics
and nanophotonics science and technologies at an industrial scale (i.e., aiming
at low-cost mass production capability) is of utmost strategic importance for
the competitiveness of the European industry in a global context. Through the
cooperative work between equipment manufacturers, nanotechnologies and photonics
experts, MONA will help to identify and address the most critical manufacturing
issues."
For
more information, visit: www.cea.fr
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