NSF-funded center to drive development of US natural rubber industry

The Ohio State University has been awarded $26 million in federal funding to jumpstart natural rubber production in the United States and enhance workforce development to fuel the new domestic industry.

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“Ohio State is prepared and eager to lead this critical initiative. This center will integrate engineering with biology and other science disciplines to understand how plants naturally produce rubber, leading to breakthrough discoveries,” said Dean of the College of Engineering Ayanna Howard. “Our innovation ecosystem brings together over 30 industry partners, researchers, students, national labs and the community it serves, and features novel programs to encourage innovation.”

“As a land-grant university, we are dedicated to integrating research, education and extension to improve industry, the environment and the quality of people’s lives – and we work to ensure that groundbreaking scientific discoveries are brought out of the laboratory and into the hands of those who can put them to work,” said Cathann A. Kress, Ohio State vice president for agricultural administration and dean of CFAES. “This investment from NSF celebrates the university’s commitment to research that makes an impact.”

Industry partners are critical to the success of TARDISS ERC both in terms of supporting technology translation and workforce development efforts.

“There is a tremendous amount of economic potential in U.S. bioengineering that will be unlocked by the TARDISS Engineering Research Center,” said Fraser McLeod, vice president, QA/QC Waters Division and Wyatt Technology general manager. “As a leading manufacturer of analytical instruments used in macromolecular characterization, Waters is pleased to support this critical research and the light scattering technologies that will enable the cultivation and extraction of domestically produced natural rubber for the benefit of American industry.” 

“The Rubber Division of the American Chemical Society represents hundreds of companies that depend on a stable supply of natural rubber to make critical products for the U.S. economy.  This new Engineering Research Center will help shift the production of natural rubber from overseas to domestic sources, thereby improving supply chains for our members and creating many American jobs and startups in our industry,” said Lakisha Barclay, executive director and CEO, Rubber Division of the American Chemical Society.

Since its founding in 1985, NSF’s ERC program has funded 79 centers (not including those announced today) that receive support for up to 10 years. The centers build partnerships with educational institutions, government agencies and industry stakeholders to support innovation and inclusion in established and emerging engineering research.

“NSF’s Engineering Research Centers ask big questions in order to catalyze solutions with far-reaching impacts,” said NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan. “NSF Engineering Research Centers are powerhouses of discovery and innovation, bringing America’s great engineering minds to bear on our toughest challenges. By collaborating with industry and training the workforce of the future, ERCs create an innovation ecosystem that can accelerate engineering innovations, producing tremendous economic and societal benefits for the nation.”

This is the second NSF-funded ERC to be established at Ohio State in the last two years. The Hybrid Autonomous Manufacturing, Moving from Evolution to Revolution (HAMMER) ERC was awarded funding in 2022. With today’s announcement, Ohio State joins only a small number of universities to have led simultaneous awards.


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