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The Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication
A national facility for nano-scale fabrication and integration.The Melbourne Centre for NanoFabrication will provide Australia’s leading scientists and engineers with the tools to build miniature devices that could potentially revolutionise the health care and environmental maintenance sectors. The MCN will couple state of the art instrumentation for nano and micro scale fabrication – that is, for fabrication at the scale of 1/100,000 and 1/10,000 of a human hair – with purpose built laboratories for making ever smaller, more powerful and more effective devices such as drug delivery devices, diagnostics and water sensing for improving our health and the health of our environment. VisionObjectives Themes Infrustructure & Equipment Governance & Structure VisionTo generate skills and beneficial opportunities in the micro-nano-bio sciences and technologies through the multidisciplinary and multi-institutional interactions between researchers and commercial participants within an environment and using unique supporting infrastructure that is a National Facility with its headquarters in Victoria. MissionThe vision will be achieved by –
ObjectivesThe objective of the MCN will be to assist the Victorian business and research sector achieve global competitiveness in nano technologies for medical and environmental applications. The Facility will leverage from the investments made by the State and Commonwealth Governments over the last 30 to 40 years in biotech to deliver a biotech sector built around devices, such as drug delivery systems. Themes
Infrustructure & EquipmentThe construction and commissioning of a micro and nano fabrication facility in Melbourne will provide local researchers and industry with the means of producing complex micro and nanoscience based devices using a vast array of tools that are not available collectively elsewhere in Australia. Such ‘prototype’ devices include scientific, medical, environmental sensing, food quality monitoring, lab on a chip, chemical production and energy producing devices. Such a facility is a way of attaining world class infrastructure only available on the scale of such a joint investment.
Governance & StructureThe MCN has been designed to be an open-access world class bio-nano fabrication capability focussed on health and environmental applications. It will comprise a national facility, integrated with local sub-node facilities housed within the MCN partners – CSIRO, RMIT University, Deakin University, MiniFAB (Aust) Pty Ltd, Swinburne University, Small Technologies Cluster Pty Ltd, La Trobe University, the University of Melbourne and Monash University. Its funding will be provided by NCRIS, the State Government and the project proposal partners. Four other major nodes will be established nationally under the NCRIS programme for fabrication. Each major node will be operationally independent and required to design and establish its own structure and governance model, including its local sub-nodes. The investment will be in equipment and infrastructure. MCN will comprise biological and non-biological fabrication techniques, e.g. photolithography, deposition, self-assembly, synthesis, dicing, bonding, testing and modelling tools as well as systems integration capabilities, housed within dedicated laboratories and clean rooms, open to research users who will also have access local environments to work with other scientific disciplines an institutions. The goal is to maximize cross-disciplinary interaction. A large scale nano-fabrication capability will allow Victorian researchers and industry to produce world competitive nano-scientific outcomes with high publication and industrial impact. The ability to rapidly prototype and prove a concept for scientific and/or commercial reasons is an international competitive advantage. Furthermore, the capability has uniquely been designed to maximise collaboration and output by scientists across the physical and biomedical sciences. These factors are now critical for high end scientific publication and for technology translation in an industrial context. The facility will also aid in the hiring of and collaboration with international leaders. The proposed structure and governance model for the Victorian Node is set out below. National Structure – ANFF, the Australian National Fabrication Facility At a national level, Australian National Fabrication Facility manages the entire NCRIS fabrication investment by the Commonwealth Government and to ensure the four major nodes adhere to their proposed strategies. It oversees the Victorian, NSW, Queensland, ANU and South Australian Nodes. For more information click here. MCN - Victorian Node Structure The MCN will be independent of and report to ANFF, and will comprise –
MCN will be structured as an unincorporated joint venture between the partners Monash University, CSIRO, Deakin University, MiniFAB (Australia) Pty Ltd, STC Pty Ltd, RMIT University, the University of Melbourne, Swinburne University and LaTrobe University (membership TBD, based on contributions). The joint venture appointed Monash University, through the Monash Institute for Nanosciences, Materials and Manufacture to report to ANFF. |