|

 |
CSI/CUNY News Release |
 |
| |
For Immediate Release |
|
College of Staten Island awarded $2.3M
to expand high-tech research program
Staten Island, NY – July 19, 2004 – New York Governor George Pataki
just announced a five-year, $2.3 million grant to the College of
Staten Island (CSI) to “bolster and expand high-tech research” as
part of a new comprehensive initiative to spur technology-based
applied research and economic development across the state.
The grant, funded through the College Applied Research and
Technology (CART) program of the New York State Office of Science,
Technology, and Academic Research (NYSTAR), is “yet another
milestone that recognizes the scientific research accomplishments of
our college’s faculty,” noted Marlene Springer, president of CSI.
“CSI scientists contribute to our mission of undergraduate and
graduate education while they also successfully compete with
scientists at other major research institutions in obtaining
significant research grants,” she continued.
Over the past few years, CSI has attracted many prominent faculty
members to its chemistry, and engineering science and physics
departments who have collectively built an interdisciplinary
research program in the area of engineered polymeric materials,
according to David Podell, CSI’s provost and vice president for
academic affairs.
The CART grant will support the establishment of the Center for
Engineered Polymeric Materials, which will further advance the
college’s research efforts in polymers and engineered nanomaterials,
which are materials one thousand times smaller than the human hair,
or one-billionth of a meter.
Dr. Nan-Loh Yang, a CSI chemistry professor and chair of the CUNY
Polymer Ph.D. Program, is a senior investigator for the research
initiatives of the Center. The projects include studying a variety
of nanomaterials and developing processes to inexpensively produce
nanomaterials for commercial use.
“Basically, we will be conducting applied research on polymers,
which most people recognize as forms of plastic and fibers,” said
Dr. Yang, adding that this research plays an integral role in the
basics of nanotechnology.
“With this important funding, we will significantly enhance our
equipment,” he continued, “and this will benefit students by
engaging them in hands-on research and exposing them to industrial
activity in our laboratories.”
Students and researchers at the Center will be spurred on by the
promise of creating new materials, according to Dr. Yang.
These materials may then go on and benefit society in a variety of
ways, for example, by developing batteries with a high energy
density that may power mobile phones and other consumer electronics,
new fibers to enhance commercial optical communications, and
“pollution abatement” resins that absorb harmful pollutants from
exhausts.
“By conducting this important research, the Center will not only
explore the forefront of nano-tech research, but will also train the
next generation of scientists by offering industry-oriented outreach
programs for professionals regarding trends and current developments
in the field,” commented President Springer.
The Center’s research activity will be overseen by an advisory board
of industry leaders and researchers who will work with CSI
scientists to identify areas of research, supporting the overarching
goal to promote the economy of New York State through collaborative
research and development.
Last year CSI was awarded a NYSTAR grant for $2.5 million in support
of its CUNY Institute for Macromolecular Assemblies on its Staten
Island campus, which is focusing on research in biomedical fields.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
###
|
 |
CSI Experts
|
 |
Need an expert?
CSI Faculty consists of professors
with recognized expertise in a variety of disciplines: urban
history, psychology, applied mathematics, political science, gender
and women's studies, education, ecology, evolutionary biology,
accounting, marketing, finance, international business, and the
arts.
Research faculty and staff at CSI
are authorities on polymers, engineered materials and biopolymers,
neuroscience and developmental disabilities, as well as
environmental health issues.
|
 |
 |
|