NSF LogoNSF Award Abstract - #0084102 AWSFL008-DS3

Biocomplexity (Incubation Activity): Impact of Industrial Products and Processes
on Biocomplexity - A Multidisciplinary Approach with Applications to Fiber
Products and Processes

NSF Org DMI
Latest Amendment Date June 25, 2003
Award Number 0084102
Award Instrument Standard Grant
Program Manager Julie Chen
DMI DIV OF DESIGN,MANUFAC & INDUSTRIAL INNOV
ENG DIRECTORATE FOR ENGINEERING
Start Date September 15, 2000
Expires February 28, 2003 (Estimated)
Expected Total Amount $99992 (Estimated)
Investigator David I. Bransby bransdi@auburn.edu (Principal Investigator current)
Mahmoud M. El-Halwagi (Principal Investigator former)
Conner Bailey (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Howard A. Clonts (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Cynthia M. Morton (Co-Principal Investigator current)
Sponsor Auburn University
202 Samford Hall
Auburn, AL 36849 205/826-4000
NSF Program 1467 MATERIALS PROCESSING & MANUFCT
Field Application 0308000 Industrial Technology
Program Reference Code 1467,1669,9146,MANU,

Abstract

Industrial products and processes exert some of the most profound and irreversible changes on the ecosystem. They contribute to biocomplexity by altering the delicate balances of biological, physical, and social systems via the usage of natural resources, the reintroduction of new materials to the environment, and the influence on behavior patterns and stimulating responses of living species. The primary objective of this incubation activity is to enable, orient, and integrate the multidisciplinary endeavors of a group of researchers to define the major issues, system interactions, critical needs, opportunities and future directions pertaining to the impact of industrial systems on biocomplexity. A pool of excellence will be formed to include 26 multidisciplinary faculty members from Auburn University and Tuskegee University along with their associates and students, and leading authorities from other academic institutions, Federal agencies and labs, and industry. These individuals provide a truly diverse background (engineering, chemistry, biology, microbiology, forestry, agronomy, business economics, sociology, and psychology) to address the proposed biocomplexity research for the first time in an integrated, systematic, and truly multidisciplinary framework. The requested NSF fund along with its institutional and industrial matching funds will be used to develop research networking, interactions, and management plans, to support a two-semester weekly seminar series, a focused retreat, an international conference with topical symposia and published proceedings, and three special issues in leading journals.


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