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The unveiling of a new tool at the Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication (MCN) to support ground-breaking cancer research illustrates how Monash is enabling collaboration leading to extraordinary research and commercialisation outcomes.
Monash is the host of the MCN, a joint venture between Monash and seven other Victorian universities and the CSIRO, which has the largest open access cleanroom space in the southern hemisphere. Established in 2011, it has more than 100 pieces of major research infrastructure designed to enable and support innovation and commercialisation of research in the field of Advanced Manufacturing by groups across Australia.
The Centre is located in the Monash Technology Precinct at Monash’s Clayton campus, which through its partner network of universities, CSIRO and product developers, it brings together the best minds in Australia to advance research and product development in the fields of MedTech,Energy/Renewables, Micro-Electronic Mechanical Syst
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Australia’s Minister for Education and Youth, the Hon Alan Tudge, today officially unveiled a EULITHA Phabler 100, the latest addition to the Australian National Fabrication Facility’s (ANFF) portfolio of open access research and development capabilities.
The new half-a-million-dollar tool is available, through ANFF, to industry and academia to enable production of nanoscale devices, and to allow developing companies to establish a foothold in their relevant markets.
The Phabler, a high-throughput nanopatterning system capable of processing hundreds of components a day, was acquired to initially support La Trobe Professor Brian Abbey and colleagues scale up their smart microscope slides that can be used to more accurately diagnose cancer.
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How La Trobe is transforming microscopy
La Trobe researchers have developed an innovative microscope slide prototype thanks to a new nanotechnology tool unveiled in Melbourne.
Australia’s Minister for Education and Youth, the Hon Alan Tudge, today officially unveiled a EULITHA Phabler 100, the latest addition to the Australian National Fabrication Facility‘s (ANFF) portfolio of open access research and development capabilities.
The new half-a-million-dollar tool is available, through ANFF, to industry and academia to enable production of nanoscale devices, and to allow developing companies to establish a foothold in their relevant markets.
The Phabler, a high-throughput nanopatterning system capable of processing hundreds of components a day, was acquired to initially support La Trobe Professor Brian Abbey and colleagues scale up their smart microscope slides that can be used to more accurately diagnose cancer.
Molecules from unique species similar in structure and function to human skin molecules
Scientists from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Electromaterial Science (ACES) and University of Wollongong (UOW), in partnership with their seaweed bioinks collaborators Venus Shell Systems, have discovered that a molecular species known as ulvan aids wound healing in humans.
Their research paper is the cover story on the latest issue of Biomaterials Science. Titled ‘3D bioprinting dermal-like structures using species-specific ulvan’, the new findings outline how ulvan contained in green seaweed can play a key role in wound healing with its structure resembling the biomolecules found in humans.
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