by Tina Reed | The Ann Arbor News
Tuesday September 30, 2008, 7:25 AM

Eliyahu Gurfinkel | The Ann Arbor News
Jay Guo, an associate professor of electrical engineering at the
University of Michigan, stands next to a prototype of a machine he created
that can "write" on microchips and help produce brighter and more efficient
LCD displays and improved solar panels.
At first glance, University of Michigan researcher Jay Guo's invention
just might look like a small newspaper printing press.
But look closer, he said, and you'll see a machine that can continuously
imprint tiny computer chips with information nearly as easily as a compact
disc burner writes on a CD.
The U-M electrical engineering and computer science professor's hope is
to bring down the cost of making the chips. The same technology can be used
to more easily make solar panels and LCD screens.
"We want to perfect this technology and find more and more applications
for it," Guo said.

Eliyahu Gurfinkel | Ann Arbor News
A "nanograting" film from Jay Guo's prototype microchip imprinting
machine creates a rainbow of colors as its microscopic grooves refract the
light.
Guo's computer chip imprinter is one of more than 300 inventions that
researchers disclosed last year to U-M's Technology Transfer office. The
tech transfer office is charged with trying to turn ideas at the university
into commercialized products or business ideas.
This year, U-M is boasting 13 new startup businesses as a result of ideas
it received in the past. It will feature some of them at its 8th annual
Celebrate Invention event on Wednesday.
"If you look at the past five or six years, we've made a lot of
progress," said Ken Nisbet, executive director of U-M's Tech Transfer
office. "The number 13 is a very impressive number compared to other
universities' with (business) spinouts. It puts us in the same league with
Stanford, Georgia Tech ... We are probably well within top 10, if not the
top five, in numbers of businesses spun out from the university and we are
in the Midwest."
[read the complete article here:
http://www.mlive.com/annarbornews/business/index.ssf/2008/09/university_of_michigan_office.html]
*****************************************************************************
Related links:
Celebrate Invention 2008 Event
U-M Tech Transfer Office
Prof Guo's research group homepage
|