ENGINEERING AND PHYSICAL SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCIL
Award winner: R.A. Oliver
Institution: University of Cambridge
Value: £593,937
Materials World Network to optimise the growth of InGaN quantum dots within high-quality optical microcavities
Award winner: T.J. Ryley
Institution: Loughborough University
Value: £372,584
DRT for DRT: developing relevant tools for demand-responsive transport
Award winner: J. Latham
Institution: Imperial College London
Value: £475,8
GGS - modelling forces and stresses in gigantic granular systems for coastal engineers
Award winner: R.A.W. Dryfe
Institution: University of Manchester
Value: £320,347
Materials World Network: the designer nanoparticle
Award winner: S.A. Maier
Institution: Imperial College London
Value: £530,211
Materials World Network: nano-structured materials from nanoparticle and block-copolymer assemblies for nanophotonics and optoelectronics
Award winner: J.L. Driscoll
Institution: University of Cambridge
Value: £380,535
Novel interface and strain control in epitaxial nanocomposite films
Award winner: J. Boxall
Institution: University of Sheffield
Value: £163,523
Real-time condition monitoring and early warning of failure of potable water using novel fluorescence spectroscopy instrumentation
Award winner: E. Komendantskaya
Institution: University of Dundee
Value: £124,269
Computational logic in artificial neural networks
Award winner: J.T. Mottram
Institution: University of Warwick
Value: £445,030
Connections and joints for buildings and bridges of fibre-reinforced polymer
Award winner: M.J.D. Henshaw
Institution: Loughborough University
Value: £31,526
C2 agility and requisite maturity: Loughborough University participation in Nato Task Group SAS-085
Award winner: S. Hofmann
Institution: University of Cambridge
Value: £151,813
Materials World Network: novel catalyst systems for carbon nanotube (CNT) synthesis and their underlying mechanisms
IN DETAIL
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Award winner: Ann McNeill
Institution: University of Nottingham
Value: £1.2 million
Government funding will be provided to the UK Centre for Tobacco Control Studies, coordinated by Nottingham, to drive six pilot studies across the country aimed at encouraging vulnerable sectors of society to stop smoking. Researchers at Nottingham will be involved in each pilot and will lead on a project focused on helping people with serious mental illness to tackle their tobacco dependence. Research will also take place at University College London, which will focus on services for children; Queen Mary, University of London, where studies will investigate relapse prevention and smokeless-tobacco use; the University of Bath, which will concentrate on services for pregnant women; and the universities of Central Lancashire and Stirling, which will focus on services for prisoners.
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