Darmstadt, Germany, March 15, 2019 – , a leading science and technology company, today announced the winner of its “Next Game-Changing Technology” prize, created as part of the company’s 350 Research Challenges initiative. Dr Liam Hall, of the University of Melbourne, won for his concept: Time-dependent in situ NMR spectroscopy, based on Nitrogen-Vacancy Defects in Diamonds.
“Dr Liam Hall has shown a series of developments in NMR, a workhorse in chemical structural analytics as well as non-invasive medical imaging techniques, which are leading to enhanced sensitivity and miniaturization of this key technology,” said prize sponsor Christoph Huels, head of Technology Foresight & Scouting at Merck’s Innovation Center. “We consider this concept as a breakthrough in the well-established NMR spectroscopy technique and congratulate him on his success.”
Merck’s Innovation Center, located at the company’s headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany, aims to foster ideas with the potential to grow into viable new businesses beyond the company’s current scope. With the “Next Game-Changing Technology” prize, the Innovation Center awards technologies with the potential to disrupt and fundamentally change the Healthcare, Life Science or Performance Materials markets. This challenge was initiated by Merck’s Innovation and Entrepreneurship Incubator, organized within the context of the company’s 350th anniversary celebrations.
Dr Hall’s concept addresses the challenge of in situ monitoring of chemical composition in microscopic reaction systems on timescales previously inaccessible to nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. Time-dependent monitoring of NMR signatures associated with short-lived intermediate species will provide a new window into the relevant processes of reaction mixtures and nano-assembly systems. This research has the potential to revolutionize our understanding of many chemical reaction mechanisms and pathways, and thus promises to catalyze further research in synthetic chemistry and biochemical fields.
“We are proud that such innovative concepts are being developed in Australia and that they are getting recognized by our headquarters,” said Bradley Simpson, managing director, Life Science, at Merck in Australia. “We are delighted to present the prize to Dr Hall on behalf of the Merck Innovation Center.”
Dr Hall’s concept convinced the judges because of the way it complements projects already running within Merck’s Innovation Center, and the future relevance of the field for Merck. While Merck employees at the Innovation Center are already working on a solution for X-ray crystallography without the need for crystallization, Dr Hall’s work concentrates on NMR using diamond-based detector devices which is aimed at enabling the investigation of individual cells.
Merck representatives presented the prize to Dr Hall at an event in Melbourne. The award ceremony followed a presentation about Dr Hall’s concept to representatives of the University and Merck employees.