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2229036

Project Grant

Overview

Grant Description
FMRG: Cyber: Manufacturing USA: Cyber-Enabled, High-Throughput Manufacturing of Multi-Material, 3D Nanostructures

High-speed, nanoscale 3D printing has the potential to transform manufacturing and enable the fabrication of many products that are currently infeasible to produce. Unfortunately, contemporary 3D printing techniques fall well short of the throughput, resolution, and yield requirements of many potential applications.

This grant will support research to develop a novel nanoscale 3D printing technique that will revolutionize our ability to manufacture products such as water filtration membranes that require precise, multi-material 3D nanostructures. Compared with state-of-the-art micro/nanoscale 3D printing, we expect this work to increase the spatial resolution by over an order of magnitude and the throughput by five orders of magnitude by allowing volumetric nanostructures to be fabricated from multiple materials simultaneously.

The new water filtration membranes enabled by this nanoscale 3D printing process will improve the tradeoff between selectivity and permeability in water filtration by an estimated factor of 10x while reducing membrane costs by a factor of 100x. These improvements will result in an overall cost reduction in ultrafiltration of up to 25%, potentially saving billions of dollars per year.

This project will also enhance workforce development by:

(1) Creating a new nanoengineering certificate program to rapidly train workers for the semiconductor industry,

(2) Developing a new nanoengineering master's program targeting students from underrepresented groups,

(3) Leveraging the Research Experiences for Teachers (RET) program to bring the "learning labs" to schools with large underrepresented-minority populations, and

(4) Working with industrial partners to create internship opportunities for students.

In traditional approaches to nanoscale 3D printing, improvements in resolution, precision, and throughput often conflict. The nanoscale 3D printing process developed under this grant will end these tradeoffs by using sub-wavelength-patterned metamasks to create near-field multi-colored holographic patterns in new multi-wavelength photocurable resists to allow entire multi-material 3D structures to be patterned with sub-diffraction resolution in a single light exposure.

Cyber-data analytics will be used to create feedback loops for both individual sub-processes and the overall mask and materials designs. Smart sampling of these 3D nanostructures using novel metrology tools will be combined with machine learning and physics-based models to create a hybrid framework to test the fundamental limits of nanoscale 3D printing.

Expected outcomes of this work include:

(1) New methods for creating near-field metamasks for multi-wavelength 3D nanopatterning,

(2) New resist chemistries enabling multi-wavelength, multi-material patterning,

(3) New understanding of the physics that limit resolution, throughput, material properties, and yield in nanoscale 3D printing,

(4) New high-speed, data-enabled hybrid metrology approaches for measuring nanoscale 3D features in real time, and

(5) New hybrid control techniques that use metrology data and physics-based models to intelligently enhance yield.

This future manufacturing research is supported by the Divisions of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation (ENG/CMMI), Chemistry (MPS/CHE), and Engineering Education and Centers (ENG/EEC). This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
Funding Goals
THE GOAL OF THIS FUNDING OPPORTUNITY, "FUTURE MANUFACTURING", IS IDENTIFIED IN THE LINK: HTTPS://WWW.NSF.GOV/PUBLICATIONS/PUB_SUMM.JSP?ODS_KEY=NSF22568
Place of Performance
Austin, Texas 78712-1139 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 2364% from $125,000 to $3,080,132.
University Of Texas At Austin was awarded Nano 3D Printing for Multi-Material Nanostructures Project Grant 2229036 worth $3,080,132 from the Division of Materials Research in October 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Austin Texas United States. The grant has a duration of 4 years and was awarded through assistance program 47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences. The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Future Manufacturing.

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 9/10/25

Period of Performance
10/1/22
Start Date
9/30/26
End Date
75.0% Complete

Funding Split
$3.1M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.1M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to 2229036

Subgrant Awards

Disclosed subgrants for 2229036

Transaction History

Modifications to 2229036

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
2229036
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
490703 DIV OF CIVIL, MECHAN MANUF INNOV
Funding Office
490307 DIVISION OF MATERIALS RESEARCH
Awardee UEI
V6AFQPN18437
Awardee CAGE
9B981
Performance District
TX-25
Senators
John Cornyn
Ted Cruz

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
Research and Related Activities, National Science Foundation (049-0100) General science and basic research Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $2,499,732 100%
Modified: 9/10/25