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Tyndall Researchers Awarded Irish Research Council Funding

Posted on: 18 Dec 2023

Tyndall Researchers Awarded Irish Research Council Funding

The Irish Research Council (IRC) have announced the awardees for the Postdoctoral Fellowship, Postgraduate Scholarship, and Enterprise Partnership Awards, with four Tyndall researchers receiving funding across the three schemes. 

Minister Simon Harris recently announced that €24.6 million in Irish Research Council funding will be granted to support emerging researchers and projects. Speaking about the new investment, Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science Simon Harris, TD, said:

“I am pleased to announce funding for critical research projects spanning a broad range of areas across science, technology, engineering, maths, arts, humanities and social sciences.”

“By supporting this activity, we are cultivating generational talent within Ireland’s research and innovation ecosystem that is focusing on key challenges and opportunities and on the issues facing this generation such as climate and technology.”

 

Awardees: Anurag Pritam, Karl Rönnby, and Hazel Neill.
Not pictured: Michael Sweetman. 

The Tyndall Awardees are:

Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme

Karl Rönnby 
Project Title: Control of interconnect metal morphology on complex substrates for 3D neuromorphic architectures

Anurag Pritam
Project Title: Room temperature multiferroicity in higher-layered homologues of Aurivillius films for sustainable data storage applications

Postgraduate Scholarship Programme

Michael Sweetman
Project Title: Control of the Morphology of Metal Films Deposited on 2D Materials Substrates

Enterprise Partnership Scheme (Postgraduate)

Hazel Neill
Project Title: All 2D Material-Based Josephson Junction for Quantum Technologies (2D-QT)

Welcoming the funding awards announcement, Dr Michael Nolan, Chair of the Research Committee at Tyndall National Institute said:

“Postgraduate students and early career researchers, who show high potential as future research leaders, are critical to developing our research excellence at Tyndall as well as providing a pipeline of the highest quality research talent. These awards, spanning PhD, enterprise focused PhD and postdoctoral researchers, are highly competitive and highlight the breadth and quality of research and the research environment at Tyndall, allowing the successful awardees to tackle critical questions in materials, data storage and semiconductor technologies.

I congratulate all the awardees and look forward to seeing how they and their research develop through the course of their fellowships.”

 

For more information about the Irish Research Council, visit  www.research.ie