Technology Institute Awards UC Berkeley $11 Million Grant

Related Articles »





  • Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
  • Comments Comments (0)

The National Institute of Standards and Technology announced Monday that it will award $11 million to UC Berkeley, which beat out nearly 100 applicants for the grant to build a new on-campus research facility.

The grant was given as part of a competition to fund science-related construction projects. The proposed center, called the Center for Integrated Precision and Quantum Measurement, will be used to measure and experiment on a nanoscale with minimal interference from the outside environment.

The money from the grant, as well as $8.8 million in state funding, will go toward building the infrastructure for the 10,000-square-foot facility, which will be built in the basement of the new Campbell Hall. The building, which currently houses the astronomy department, is scheduled to be demolished by 2010 and rebuilt in two to four years.

Michael Crommie, a UC Berkeley physics professor and lead investigator for the proposal, said he hopes the facility's research will create better medical and electronic technologies.

"We would like to be able to control matter at very small length scales," he said. "If we could do that, we could use those structures to create smaller, faster electronic devices that use less energy than current devices."

The institute chose to fund UC Berkeley based on the merits of the proposed project and its intent to further research of interest to the Department of Commerce, said Michael Baum, a spokesperson for the institute. The institute also awarded UC San Diego about $12 million and University of Florida $1 million for research construction projects.

"The facility at Berkeley is targeting research in a bunch of delicate quantum measurements in the realm of physics," he said. "The target of the project is to create a low-noise, high-stability facility."

Although Crommie said the facility still needs much more funding for equipment and personnel, he said he looked forward to the cutting-edge research that would be done in the center.

"I think it's fundamentally interesting, I think it's fundamentally important," Crommie said. "I think it is critical for future technologies that we do this research. We're pushing the envelope."


Contact Valerie Woolard at vwoolard@dailycal.org.



Comments (0) »

Comment Policy
The Daily Cal encourages readers to voice their opinions respectfully in regards to both the readers and writers of The Daily Californian. Comments are not pre-moderated, but may be removed if deemed to be in violation of this policy. Comments should remain on topic, concerning the article or blog post to which they are connected. Brevity is encouraged. Posting under a pseudonym is discouraged, but permitted. Click here to read the full comment policy.
White space
Left Arrow
Research and Ideas
Image Mine to House Groundbreaking Research
Returning to the same gold mine shaft that he worked at over a 30-year care...Read More»
Research and Ideas
Image Despite Cuts, Research Keeps UC Berkeley in Public...
Professors and researchers from UC Berkeley are constantly in...Read More»
Research and Ideas
Image Study Claims Workplace Bullying Is a Sign of Insec...
In NBC's television show "The Office," character Michael Sco...Read More»
Research and Ideas
Image Campus Researchers to Launch Study on Cloud Comput...
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is expecting a shipment ...Read More»
Research and Ideas
Image Professor Appointed to New Sustainable Chemistry P...
UC Berkeley's College of Chemistry appointed a professor to a ...Read More»
Research and Ideas
Image Scientists Develop Research Tool Using Inkjet Prin...
Though it may not look it, an everyday computer printer may so...Read More»
Right Arrow






Job Postings

White Space