Universities should not be required to drive innovation, a Nobel prizewinning scientist has claimed, adding that governments look to higher education for technology transfer out of 鈥渄esperation鈥.
Sir Konstantin Novoselov, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010 for his work on graphene, said that 鈥渁ll governments realise that innovation is the way to progress鈥, but that states were looking to the wrong actors to carry out this work.
鈥淭hey look to their ministries鈥hey cross out all those who are not relevant, and they are stuck with the ministry of education. So they say, 鈥榣et our universities do the innovation鈥. Unfortunately our universities are fundamentally incapable of doing this, at least in their modern form,鈥 he said.
Sir Konstantin, professor at the Centre for Advanced 2D Materials at the National University of Singapore and Langworthy professor of physics and Royal Society research professor at the University of Manchester, said that there were 鈥渕any issues鈥 but one key reason was a lack of funding.
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鈥淚f you want to be successful on the patent landscape in any area 鈥 material science, computer engineering, anything 鈥 you need a package of maybe 10, 20, 100 patents. You cannot even think about financing this from the university,鈥 he said.
In an interview with聽探花视频, the Russian-British scientist added that research applications still tended to be developed by industry, rather than universities, but this should not be seen as a failure of the higher education sector.
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鈥淚 don鈥檛 think universities need to adapt because it鈥檚 not what they should be doing. Universities are there to educate and produce research. We cannot charge universities also with business development,鈥 he said.
鈥淕overnments do this but this is聽out of desperation because they don鈥檛 have anyone else to do this.鈥
Instead, nations should 鈥渟upport small- and medium-sized enterprises to push them to do more research in collaboration with the universities鈥, Sir Konstantin said.
鈥淵ou cannot make universities responsible for innovation in countries. That鈥檚 absolutely wrong,鈥 he continued.
The UK government鈥檚 industrial strategy, announced in 2017, includes initiatives and funding to encourage universities to enhance knowledge transfer and work with industry. Meanwhile, England鈥檚 forthcoming聽knowledge exchange framework聽will evaluate universities鈥 performance in areas such as commercialisation and industry collaboration and could determine the distribution of institutional funding in the future.
Vincenzo Palermo, research professor at Sweden鈥檚 Chalmers University of Technology and vice-director of the Graphene Flagship, a European Union research project aimed at taking graphene from laboratories into the market, said that 鈥渦niversities nowadays make great efforts to translate their scientific results into practical applications, and they often find success鈥.
But he said that 鈥渢he development of a mature technology usually requires more than 20 years and massive resources to transition from the laboratories to industry鈥.
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Sir Konstantin relocated from the UK to Singapore earlier this year to focus on research on intelligent materials. But he suggested that Brexit was also a factor.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 a big world out there so I think we need to be more exposed and more connected. Brexit doesn鈥檛 help at all, unfortunately,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think [Brexit] will have quite a serious impact and not only because of funding, also in terms of attracting talent to this country.鈥
However, he rejected the commonly held view that while the UK had invented graphene, it was behind in the race to profit from its many applications.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we have failed. Not at all. I think if anything we鈥檙e punching above our weight on this,鈥 he said.
鈥淚n the UK we are doing quite well in terms of the number of start-ups and small companies working with graphene鈥ome of our start-ups from the University of Manchester now have production across the globe.鈥
Maria Iliut, founder and chief executive of Grafine, a spinout from Manchester, agreed that 鈥渦niversities shouldn鈥檛 be converted into the development arm of companies鈥 but said universities were best placed to do applied research, which can 鈥渙verlap with what some people might call development鈥.
She said that the UK has 鈥渄one quite well鈥 in taking graphene research towards commercialisation, adding that 鈥渢he only graphene consumer product that is available worldwide, the inov-8 graphene-enhanced shoes, were developed by me and my colleagues in the UK鈥.
But she said that 鈥渙ther countries will very easily catch up and surpass us if we don鈥檛 continue to fund both fundamental research and provide strong support for translation of research into the commercial realm鈥.
Dame Nancy Rothwell, Manchester鈥檚 president, said that while universities 鈥渁re indeed focussed on research and education鈥here are many examples of successful innovation including at the University of Manchester鈥.
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鈥淭here will always be a need for collaboration between industry and academia. In fact we are working closely with [Sir Konstantin] and business leaders to develop an exciting new model to realise the potential commercial opportunities for Graphene and other two dimensional materials,鈥 Dame Nancy said.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Innovation should not be duty of HE, says Nobelist
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