Project acronym APOLLO
Project Advanced Signal Processing Technologies for Wireless Powered Communications
Researcher (PI) Ioannis Krikidis
Host Institution (HI) UNIVERSITY OF CYPRUS
Country Cyprus
Call Details Consolidator Grant (CoG), PE7, ERC-2018-COG
Summary Wireless power transfer (WPT), pioneered by Tesla, is an idea at least as old as radio communications. However, on the one hand, due to health concerns and the large antenna dimensions required for transmission of high energy levels, until recently WPT has been limited mostly to very short distance applications. On the other hand, recent advances in silicon technology have significantly reduced the energy needs of electronic systems, making WPT over radio waves a potential source of energy for low power devices. Although WPT through radio waves has already found various short-range applications (such as the radio-frequency identification technology, healthcare monitoring etc.), its integration as a building block in the operation of wireless communications systems is still unexploited. On the other hand, conventional radio wave based information and energy transmissions have largely been designed separately. However, many applications can benefit from simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT).
The overall objective of the APOLLO project is to study the integration of WPT/SWIPT technology into future wireless communication systems. Compared to past and current research efforts in this area, our technical approach is deeply interdisciplinary and more comprehensive, combining the expertise of wireless communications, control theory, information theory, optimization, and electronics/microwave engineering.
The key outcomes of the project include: 1) a rigorous and complete mathematical theory for WPT/SWIPT via information/communication/control theoretic studies; 2) new physical and cross-layer mechanisms that will enable the integration of WPT/SWIPT into future communication systems; 3) new network architectures that will fully exploit potential benefits of WPT/SWIPT; and 4) development of a proof-of-concept by implementing highly-efficient and multi-band metamaterial energy harvesting sensors for SWIPT.
Summary
Wireless power transfer (WPT), pioneered by Tesla, is an idea at least as old as radio communications. However, on the one hand, due to health concerns and the large antenna dimensions required for transmission of high energy levels, until recently WPT has been limited mostly to very short distance applications. On the other hand, recent advances in silicon technology have significantly reduced the energy needs of electronic systems, making WPT over radio waves a potential source of energy for low power devices. Although WPT through radio waves has already found various short-range applications (such as the radio-frequency identification technology, healthcare monitoring etc.), its integration as a building block in the operation of wireless communications systems is still unexploited. On the other hand, conventional radio wave based information and energy transmissions have largely been designed separately. However, many applications can benefit from simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT).
The overall objective of the APOLLO project is to study the integration of WPT/SWIPT technology into future wireless communication systems. Compared to past and current research efforts in this area, our technical approach is deeply interdisciplinary and more comprehensive, combining the expertise of wireless communications, control theory, information theory, optimization, and electronics/microwave engineering.
The key outcomes of the project include: 1) a rigorous and complete mathematical theory for WPT/SWIPT via information/communication/control theoretic studies; 2) new physical and cross-layer mechanisms that will enable the integration of WPT/SWIPT into future communication systems; 3) new network architectures that will fully exploit potential benefits of WPT/SWIPT; and 4) development of a proof-of-concept by implementing highly-efficient and multi-band metamaterial energy harvesting sensors for SWIPT.
Max ERC Funding
1 930 625 €
Duration
Start date: 2019-07-01, End date: 2025-03-31
Project acronym Immuno-Predictor
Project Mechanical Biomarkers for Prediction of Cancer Immunotherapy
Researcher (PI) Triantafyllos STYLIANOPOULOS
Host Institution (HI) UNIVERSITY OF CYPRUS
Country Cyprus
Call Details Consolidator Grant (CoG), PE8, ERC-2019-COG
Summary Immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of multiple cancers and has already become a standard of care for some tumor types. However, a majority of patients do not benefit from current immunotherapeutics and many develop severe toxicities. Therefore, the identification of biomarkers to classify patients as likely responders or nonresponders to immunotherapy is a timely and of tremendous impact task. My hypothesis is that biomechanical aspects of the tumor microenvironment mediate resistance to immunotherapy. Specifically, many tumors stiffen as they grow and also, tumor growth within the host tissue generates mechanical forces, termed solid stress. Tumor stiffening and solid stress are distinct mechanical abnormalities that compress intratumoral blood vessels, causing hypo-perfusion and hypoxia. Systemic administration of immunotherapeutics requires a well-perfused vasculature, whereas hypo-perfusion and hypoxia promote immunosuppression, helping cancer cells to evade immune responses. The objective of the proposed research is the identification of novel Mechanical Biomarkers related to tumor stiffness, solid stress, perfusion and hypoxia for prediction of immunotherapy. Tumor-bearing mice will be developed and treated with immunotherapeutic drugs and clinically used methods will be combined with computational biomechanical modeling for measuring the Mechanical Biomarkers, making the research transferable to the clinic. The biomarkers will be benchmarked against tumor normalization strategies aiming to restore/normalize mechanical abnormalities and optimize immunotherapy. Finally, the clinical utility of the selected biomarkers will be evaluated in human tumors. Only few tumor-specific biomarkers are used in the clinic - based mainly on genomic analysis. This project is expected to lead to the first biomarkers for immunotherapy prediction exploiting tumor mechanics.
Summary
Immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of multiple cancers and has already become a standard of care for some tumor types. However, a majority of patients do not benefit from current immunotherapeutics and many develop severe toxicities. Therefore, the identification of biomarkers to classify patients as likely responders or nonresponders to immunotherapy is a timely and of tremendous impact task. My hypothesis is that biomechanical aspects of the tumor microenvironment mediate resistance to immunotherapy. Specifically, many tumors stiffen as they grow and also, tumor growth within the host tissue generates mechanical forces, termed solid stress. Tumor stiffening and solid stress are distinct mechanical abnormalities that compress intratumoral blood vessels, causing hypo-perfusion and hypoxia. Systemic administration of immunotherapeutics requires a well-perfused vasculature, whereas hypo-perfusion and hypoxia promote immunosuppression, helping cancer cells to evade immune responses. The objective of the proposed research is the identification of novel Mechanical Biomarkers related to tumor stiffness, solid stress, perfusion and hypoxia for prediction of immunotherapy. Tumor-bearing mice will be developed and treated with immunotherapeutic drugs and clinically used methods will be combined with computational biomechanical modeling for measuring the Mechanical Biomarkers, making the research transferable to the clinic. The biomarkers will be benchmarked against tumor normalization strategies aiming to restore/normalize mechanical abnormalities and optimize immunotherapy. Finally, the clinical utility of the selected biomarkers will be evaluated in human tumors. Only few tumor-specific biomarkers are used in the clinic - based mainly on genomic analysis. This project is expected to lead to the first biomarkers for immunotherapy prediction exploiting tumor mechanics.
Max ERC Funding
2 000 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2020-04-01, End date: 2025-03-31
Project acronym Sol-Pro
Project Solution Processed Next Generation Photovoltaics
Researcher (PI) Stylianos (Stelios) Choulis
Host Institution (HI) TECHNOLOGIKO PANEPISTIMIO KYPROU
Country Cyprus
Call Details Consolidator Grant (CoG), PE8, ERC-2014-CoG
Summary The profound advantages of printed photovoltaics (PVs), such as their light weight, mechanical flexibility in addition to the small energy demand, and low cost equipment requirements for roll-to-roll mass production, characterise them as a dominant candidate source for future electrical power. Over the last few years, the discovery of novel solution processed electronic materials and device structures boosted PV power conversion efficiency values. Despite that, power conversion efficiency is not a 'stand-alone' product development target for next generation PVs. Lifetime, cost, flexibility and non-toxicity have to be equally considered, regarding the technological progress of solution processed PVs. The ambit of the Sol-Pro research programme is to re-design solution processed PV components relevant to the above product development targets. Based on this, processing specifications as a function of the electronic material properties will be established and provide valuable input for flexible PV applications. Adjusting the material characteristics and device design is crucial to achieve the proposed high performance PV targets. As a consequence, a number of high-level objectives concerning processing/materials/electrodes/interfaces, relevant to product development targets of next generation solution processed PVs, are aimed for within the proposed ERC programme.
Summary
The profound advantages of printed photovoltaics (PVs), such as their light weight, mechanical flexibility in addition to the small energy demand, and low cost equipment requirements for roll-to-roll mass production, characterise them as a dominant candidate source for future electrical power. Over the last few years, the discovery of novel solution processed electronic materials and device structures boosted PV power conversion efficiency values. Despite that, power conversion efficiency is not a 'stand-alone' product development target for next generation PVs. Lifetime, cost, flexibility and non-toxicity have to be equally considered, regarding the technological progress of solution processed PVs. The ambit of the Sol-Pro research programme is to re-design solution processed PV components relevant to the above product development targets. Based on this, processing specifications as a function of the electronic material properties will be established and provide valuable input for flexible PV applications. Adjusting the material characteristics and device design is crucial to achieve the proposed high performance PV targets. As a consequence, a number of high-level objectives concerning processing/materials/electrodes/interfaces, relevant to product development targets of next generation solution processed PVs, are aimed for within the proposed ERC programme.
Max ERC Funding
1 840 940 €
Duration
Start date: 2015-07-01, End date: 2020-06-30