Skip to main content
EU Science Hub
Call for proposalsClosed

Nanobiotechnology laboratory

The Nanobiotechnology Laboratory features state-of-the-art equipped facilities designed to foster interdisciplinary studies. A special emphasis lies on characterisation of nanomaterials, nanomedicines, advanced materials and their interactions with...

Details

Status
Closed
Reference
2017-1-RD-NanoBiotech
Publication date
2 February 2022 in Ispra, Italy
Opening date
Deadline model
Single-stage
Deadline date
29 September 2017, 02:00 (CEST)

Description

The Nanobiotechnology Laboratory features state-of-the-art equipped facilities designed to foster interdisciplinary studies. A special emphasis lies on characterisation of nanomaterials, nanomedicines, advanced materials and their interactions with biological systems, as well as on the detection, identification and characterisation of nanomaterials in food and consumer products.

Nanobiotechnology Laboratory view
Nanobiotechnology Laboratory view
© EU, 2017
Priority topics of the Nanobiotechnology laboratory
  1. Nanomaterial characterisation including their interactions with biological systems (culture media, proteins, etc.).

  2. Detection of nanomaterials in complex matrices.

  3. Surface chemical analysis of macro and nanomaterials.
    Surface modification and nano-fabrication. Biosensor platform characterisation.

  4. Cell cultures of adherent cells. Material biocompatibility studies. In vitro assays for assessing nanometerial genotoxicity, cytotoxicity and uptake studies.

  5. Advanced material characterisation for non-bio-applications (energy, transport, etc.).

Definition and conditions of access

Access to the research infrastructure is granted on the basis of Access Units (e.g. days or weeks of use, hours or sessions of beam time, processing time and gigabytes of data transmitted, etc.). Access Units are specific to the type and nature of each JRC research infrastructure that provides access.

For the Nanobiotechnology Laboratory the Unit of Access is 'Instrument days' which correspond to the use of one (1) instrument during one (1) day.

  • Estimated total number of Instrument days allocated to the call: 90
  • Average number of Instrument days per project: 15 (i.e. 3 instruments for 5 days)
  • Estimated costs excluding consumables and expenses:
    • Research infrastructure operated by JRC staff: 227 € / instrument day
    • Research infrastructure operated by users: 50 € / instrument day

Options for the allocation of intellectual property rights:

  • The JRC and the entitled party (person or organisation that has been granted access) become co-owners in equal shares of all raw data, treated data and documentation data developed with respect to the access;
  • or, if requested by the user or when users run the research infrastructure
  • Raw data, treated data and documentation data will be solely owned by the entitled party. The JRC receives a non-exclusive, royalty free, unlimited and world-wide license to use (meaning in particular to access, exploit, adapt, merge, translate, copy and store) the raw data, processed data and documentation data in all fields of exploitation. Where relevant, the license will include all the data / information necessary to replicate the tests.

Eligibility criteria

Selection criteria

Any proposal will be scrutinised in accordance with weighted selection criteria such as:

  • Scientific implementation
  • Access to SMEs and new Users
  • Strategic relevance to the JRC
  • Strategic importance for Europe

Communication of the assessment of proposals:2017-12-08 00:00:00

Related Content

Selection Criteria Background Documents

The 6 Priorities of the European Commission

JRC Thematic Focus Areas