
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Itaconix licenses UNH green polymer-making tech
By Mass High Tech Staff
The University
of New Hampshire reports it has licensed “green” chemistry technology to Itaconix
LLC, of New Hampshire. The technology was developed at UNH’s Nanostructured
Polymers Research Center.
Under the license, Itaconix will be able to use
the school’s process for creating environmentally friendly polymers derived from
renewable resources. The technology was developed by UNH graduate student
Ming
Cao. Cao won second place in this year’s Paul J. Holloway Business Prize
Competition.
Itaconix was founded by Yvon
Durant, associate research professor in material sciences, and John
Shaw, president of Kensington
Research Inc., to develop renewable polymers for commercial use. The company
said it plans to use the technology to develop poly(itaconic acid) to replace
petroleum-based chemicals in detergents and other applications.
Last
month, UNH’s New Hampshire Innovation Research Center announced it is seeking
proposals for funding partnership projects. The organization expects to award
four to eight Granite State Technology Innovation Grants from a wide-ranging
pool of $20,000 to $150,000 per grant. The grant RFP is open to any discipline,
but the organization stresses particular interest in bioinformatics,
computational tools, environmental technologies, geospatial analysis,
information technology, materials science, medical technologies, nanotechnology,
optics, precision engineering, robotics and sensors.
In April, a team of
University
of New Hampshire business and engineering students won first place in their
task at the 2008 Environmental Design Contest at New
Mexico State University in Las Cruces, N.M. The team, Retrolutions,
retrofitted an existing commercial building to reduce its environmental
footprint.





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