GlassOnWeb.com - Glass News - Inkjet that prints on glass wins award Rohmer + Stimfig GmbH
 
 HOME   DIRECTORY   NEWS   ARTICLES   BUSINESS AREA   FORUM    JOBS  
 
Sign-in | Registration
  »  Home  »  News  »  Inkjet that prints on glass wins award
 
Forel s.p.a.
 
   CONTRIBUTE
Submit your news
Submitted news

   NEWS ARCHIVES
2009
January
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001




GLASS ON WEB - news feed
 
  News


Companies
Inkjet that prints on glass wins award

The Irish developers of a new digital decoration technology for ceramics and glass have won an innovation award.

Professor Stuart Hampshire and Joe Doyle, director and senior research officer at the Materials Ireland Research Centre (MIRC), scooped the EUR15,000 award from Shannon Development for the planned commercialisation of their Glazejet project.

The winning duo spent three years developing technology for a single-step industrial digital inkjet printer and ceramic inks for the automated production of glazed multicolour ceramic prints on materials such as flat glass and ceramic tiles.

Based on campus at the University of Limerick, the Materials Ireland Research Centre is a commercial technical research and development organisation that focuses on the needs of the materials and related industries. The winning business plan is for the production of printers and inks on an industrial scale for the European glass and glazed ceramics markets.

"Winning this prize will give us the initial capital we needed to commercially exploit the technology, help us get publicity in the marketplace and will help us forge better links with Shannon Development," Doyle told ElectricNews.Net.

"Millions of square metres of ceramic tiles alone are printed on each year in Europe. The market potential for this 100 percent Irish product is huge and we intend to start commercially exploiting it this year," he said.

The new inks created by Hampshire and Doyle consist of ceramic powder dispersed in wax which changes from a solid at room temperature to a liquid at higher temperatures. The new ink has a longer shelf life, better stability and can be used to print on non-absorbent material.

Two other projects from the University of Limerick and one from the Institute of Technology Tralee each received awards of EUR1,000. The three runner-up prizes were given for a new method of drug delivery, an optical data transmission system and a health information product designed to help young children manage their asthma.

Entries for the campus innovation award were assessed on the strength of the project idea, the commercial potential of the idea, a business plan and the potential of a company start-up within twelve months.



January 26th, 2004
Source: Enn.ie


Print this article  Printer friendly version Send this article to a friend  Send to a Friend



Add a Comment

You have to be registered in order to add your comment.
If you already have an account, please sign-in to comment.




Latest news
Dec-22-08
Isover opens international competition
Dec-22-08
PPG publishes new sustainable building products brochure
Dec-22-08
Expansion of Production Capacity of Raw Materials for Interlayer Film for Laminated Glass
Dec-22-08
GLASSONWEB SEASONS GREETINGS
Dec-20-08
Slovakia: Vetropack launches new glass cullet line
Dec-20-08
Asahi Glass Announces Revision of Operating Results Outlook (Consolidated)
Dec-20-08
SCHOTT increases sales and profit in 2008
Dec-20-08
Glaston ends employee co-operation negotiations in Finland
Dec-20-08
Trakya Cam to decide on Bulgaria investment in 2009
Dec-19-08
Glass manufacturer temporarily shuts down


ADVERTISING