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Research commercialisation students shine at awards

3 December 2008

Benjamin Yeo, Shiau Tan, Elizabeth Chisholm, and Benjamin Fohner
Benjamin Yeo, Shiau Tan, Elizabeth Chisholm, and Benjamin Fohner.

Four Monash University postgraduate students have been named recipients of the 2008 nabCapital Science in Business Awards.

The awards are a joint initiative between Monash and nabCapital -- the capital markets division of National Australia Bank.

The students Benjamin Fohner, Elizabeth Chisholm, Shiau Tan and Ben Yeo have each received $A10,000 for research commercialisation projects undertaken as part of a Master of Business (Science and Technology) at the Monash University Asia Pacific Centre for Science and Wealth Creation.

As part of the unique course, science graduates learn the business, economics, legal and management acumen required to commercialise leading-edge medical, scientific and technological research.

Subjects include law, patents and marketing, but unlike other courses, the aspiring entrepreneurs also got hands-on experience, being assigned to work alongside some of the University's elite teams of researchers to develop real commercialisation plans for emerging research.

Monash Chancellor Dr Alan Finkel said he was extremely impressed by the high standard of projects produced by the winning students.

"These students have successfully put the skills gained from this degree to a practical and commercially viable use," Dr Finkel said.

"Research can be of little benefit to the community if it remains locked within the University.

"Innovation is only made accessible to the people who need it when it is out in the marketplace."

The winning students worked closely with researchers and industry to develop commercialisation deals for the following innovations:

  • Water splitting solar cell: The invention uses sunlight to break water into hydrogen and oxygen producing electricity in a process similar to photosynthesis. The hydrogen can be used for power (e.g. hydrogen cars) or converted back to electricity producing clean water. It also has potential for desalination.
  • Efficient production of plasmid DNA vaccines: This invention, currently being reviewed by a number of international companies, provides a means of rapidly and efficiently producing large quantities of plasmid DNA vaccines, an emerging vaccine technology with potential for vaccination against pandemics and diseases such as malaria. It is already being used in the development of an experimental malaria vaccine at Monash.
  • Treatment for Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy (FSHD): This is the third most common form of muscular dystrophy and is highly debilitating. The research is funded by a foundation set up by former Macquarie banker, Bill Moss. The students worked on patenting and commercialisation strategies for the research.

Dr Finkel congratulated award recipients and thanked nabCapital for their continued support and encouragement in developing Australia's future research innovators.