R&D Market Strategy
- Asteroid impact avoidance (Engineering)
- Alternative energy sources (Natural Sciences)
- Data mining (Supercomputing)
- Molecular mechanisms in the development of chronic emotional stress (Human Sciences)
Funding for Aerospace Engineering
Other promising areas of research in materials science include additive manufacturing technology for composite materials (3D printing), sorbents, metal-oxide monocrystals and other materials that enjoy widespread market demand. One distinctive advantage setting the University apart from other research centers is its pioneering use of supercomputing for materials properties modelling.
Funding for alternative energy sources
Besides materials science, the University is also engaged in other Natural Sciences disciplines. The most productive areas in terms of high-quality scientific results are geology and optical information technology. In geological sciences, the University works closely with the Institute of Mineralogy of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Miass, Chelyabinsk Region, while in the field of optics its most significant partner is the Institute of Electrophysics of the Ural Division of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Research work at the University is funded by domestic and international scientific grants. The University is striving to boost the total volume of international grants through a newly adopted comprehensive system to facilitate grant applications and fundraising from international sources.
In the Supercomputing, the major breakthrough area is data mining, a technique particularly essential for the comprehensive analysis of Big Data. The research findings in this area has a potential to revolutionize business models of organisations processing large volumes of information, including mobile phone operators, social media networks, banks to name a few.
The supercomputer is at the very heart of the University's research activities, as it can be used to process highly complex calculations in engineering, natural sciences and IT. Supercomputer is also used to provide University’s partners with calculation on a commercial basis. Currently supercomputing revenues constitute 16% of the R&D budget.
Funding for Supercomputing
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A major breakthrough research area in the Life Sciences is molecular mechanisms of chronic emotional stress development. In light of the high incidence of chronic stress-related diseases in major cities and the lack of effective ways for relieving stress, these studies are of great importance for modern society. Although this subject is relatively new for the University, SUSU researchers have already published on this topic in top-rated journals and have established meaningful ties within the academic community. Stress studies represent one of the University's cross-disciplinary research platforms, as they call for joint work among psychologists, biologists, and specialists in measurement and tool engineering. The University is collaborating with leading research organisations in this area, including the Harvard Medical School, Leiden University, Edinburg University и New York University.
The achievements of the University's research team in this field provide grounds for optimism, namely the discovery of a drug tolerance mechanism in cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to abnormal hepatic microsomal oxidation. This is a global priority; to date no other research center with a focus on PTSD has succeeded in obtaining similar data. This breakthrough opens up the possibility of developing holistic approaches to PTSD treatment, encompassing the following:
- non-medical therapy impacting hepatic microsomal oxidation (hypoxic training, moderate physical activity, etc.);
- development of special medicines that are made efficacious through bypassing the damaged liver and brain-blood barrier;
- elaboration of functional nutrition and diets to heal PTSD and depression.
These R&D outcomes will become the basis for innovative products that can then be patented.
Funding of Molecular Stress
Short-term plans include the establishment of a University-based research center with a dedicated focus on studies in this field. Establishing the center will require an upfront investment of about RUB 30 million, after which recruiting international scientists will require expenditures of about RUB 25 million per year. Starting from 2018-2019, the center is expected to attain sustainable financial self-sufficiency due to grant awards from local and international sources, and the commercialisation of innovations.
The University aims to modernise its facilities and provide researchers and students with most advanced equipment, essential to reach world-class level in science and education. SUSU has built powerful, up-to-date facilities that include over 10 world-class research and educational centers and laboratories equipped with unique research equipment. SUSU produces 80% of all educational laboratory equipment made in Russia and boasts the country's most complete and advanced educational laboratory complex.
List of University facilities and equipment
Laboratory description |
Equipment |
Unique characteristics |
Supercomputer simulation |
Tornado SUSU |
473.6 TFlops (trillion floating-point operations per second)
244 place in Top-500 supercomputers of the world, 6-th in the
Russian Federation
|
SKIF-Avrora SUSU |
117 TFlops (trillion floating-point operations per second) |
|
Research and Education
Center for Experimental
Mechanics and
Aerospace Engineering
|
LMS calculation-and-experimental
facility
|
The only one in the country complete complex used for
frequency-response analysis and virtual structural tests and
tests of aerospace engineering systems
|
Laboratory for testing of full size diesel engines | A set of HORIBA diesel engine hardware |
The only facility in the country designed to test full-sized
diesel engines with a capacity of 90-1,800 kW at stationary
and transient cycles
|
Optical interferometry
laboratory
|
Femtosecond laser |
The only femtosecond laser available in the Urals region |
Interferential testing
infrastructure
|
Unique infrastructure for Russia. Lab’s groundwork is not
connected with the groundwork of the building and
surrounding area, which enables to use of interferential
methods for creating photonic structures and light fields with
complex distribution of parameters.
|
To increase the attractiveness of SUSU as a global research and educational center, the University will undertake the following efforts:
- Building a 3,000-bed dormitory (the site has been allocated and the building plans drawn up)
- Accommodating 20 research laboratories and technology clusters with premises of at least 40,000 sq. m by 2020
- Constructing an Innovation Center
- Developing a barrier-free environment across University
- Improving utilities and enhancing the quality of property management mechanisms based on specific return from their use
The SUSU supercomputer ranks 349th in the TOP500 rating of the world's most powerful supercomputer systems. SUSU plans to make further investments worth more than RUB 1 billion in its supercomputer with the goal of breaking into the rating's top 100 supercomputers by 2020. Plans call for further upgrading the supercomputer's capacity in partnership with high-tech industrial companies. Estimated investment for this project totals RUB 250 million per year. Among SUSU's potential partners are Makeyev GRTs, Uralvagonzavod, KAMAZ, the Institute of Research and Development in Mechanical Engineering, RSC Technologies, and others. The University will raise the necessary funds either through direct investment or through the establishment of a target endowment fund for the supercomputer. If the University continues to develop its supercomputer further solely using its own funds, the results will not be so outstanding. It will only be sufficient to maintain the SUSU supercomputer in TOP500 ranking.
