Serious implications for aerospace design, cancer treatment and more
Together with her multidisciplinary team of Canadian and international researchers and industry collaborators, Crudden is developing a fundamentally new approach for protecting metal surfaces. The project builds on her prior discovery that a certain class of organic molecules can form bonds with a wide range of metals.
The group is exploring and developing a carbon-on-metal coating that could slow or halt corrosion and degradation caused by oxygen, changes in pH and temperature.
These coatings could prevent metals in microchips from breaking down, leading to greater longevity for computers, phones and other electronic devices. They could also guard against automobile rust, improve aerospace design and even be used on a nanoscale, improving targeted chemotherapy and radiation therapy and refining medical imaging.
The technology’s potential to improve cancer care is promising. It could enable new advances to nanomedical precision cancer treatments that could impact the health and well-being of one in two Canadians who will develop the disease in their lifetime.
Funding for the project will come from the Transformation Stream of the New Frontiers in Research Fund, which supports high-risk, high-reward interdisciplinary research and is distributed to teams over a six-year span.
“I am beyond proud of the Canadian institutions and researchers who think outside disciplines and borders to tackle major challenges,” says the François-Philippe Champagne, Canadian minister of innovation, science and industry.
“These programs are a catalyst for amplifying new voices, insights and discoveries that will answer communities’ needs, elevate our innovation hub and shape Canada’s prosperity for years to come. Congratulations to all recipients!”
The project will also involve collaborators from around the world, including academic and industry partners in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Finland and more.
Find out more about Concordia’s Department of Mechanical, Industrial and Aerospace Engineering at the Gina Cody School of Engineering and Computer Science.
With files from Queen’s University.