ANNOUNCEMENTS

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  • Global synthetic diamond innovation centre to be built in the UK

    May 8, 2012 at 6:39:58 PM by Joanne Absolom - Tags: Element Six announces £20m innovation centre investment at Harwell Oxford - Comments (0)

    Global synthetic diamond innovation centre to be built in the UK

    Element Six announces £20m innovation centre investment at Harwell Oxford

    8 May 2012: Element Six, the world leader in synthetic diamond supermaterials, has announced it is to start construction of the world’s largest and most sophisticated synthetic diamond supermaterials research and development facility. The £20m investment near Oxford in the UK will consolidate Element Six’s global innovation teams into one integrated centre, developing a pipeline of innovative products for customers in industries from oil and gas drilling to machining and electronics. Synthetic diamond supermaterials typically improve productivity, reduce energy consumption and enable leaps in technology never previously considered in a multitude of applications.

    Once complete in Spring 2013, the new Global Innovation Centre will reinforce Element Six’s position as the world-leader in synthetic diamond research and will employ more than 100 top engineers, scientists and technicians. 50 new material science jobs will be created, with the vast majority of new positions available for highly qualified graduate scientists, engineers and physicists. Element Six will be offering these innovators an unrivalled opportunity to work with the extreme properties of synthetic diamond and related supermaterials at a state-of-the-art facility.

    Aligned with the Government’s desire to foster investment in R&D and advanced manufacturing, Element Six, with support from UK Trade & Investment, identified Harwell Oxford in the UK as the site for its Global Innovation Centre. This leading science park was chosen for its world-renowned reputation in science and innovation, high-tech talent pool and excellent global connectivity.

    UK Trade & Investment supported Element Six by proposing and advising on potential locations, organising site visits, facilitating meetings with site owners and developers, preparing bespoke research and bringing in the expertise of the councils, Local Enterprise Partnerships, academic institutions and research partners.

    Rt Hon Dr Vince Cable MP, Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills, said:

    “The investment by Element Six, that will bring a world class research and development facility to Harwell, shows that the UK is a great place for innovative and cutting edge industries to invest. Along with a real boost to the local economy, providing around 50 new highly skilled engineering jobs, the investment shows that the Oxford region is a world leading location for hi-tech research, and that the UK is open for business.”

    Cyrus Jilla, Element Six CEO, commented:

                “I am proud we selected the UK as the best location globally for our Innovation Centre. I am positive it will deliver higher performance products for our customers, disruptive technologies for new applications and markets, inspire and spur new related businesses in the UK, and provide an extremely rewarding environment for our scientists who are at the forefront of their field.”

    Harwell Oxford is being developed by a joint venture between international property group Goodman, the UK Atomic Energy Authority and the Science and Technology Facilities Council.

    Jim Johnston, Goodman UK Managing Director, said: 

    “We are delighted that Element Six has chosen Harwell Oxford as the location for its new global research and innovation centre. The new development will further enhance Harwell Oxford’s reputation as a world class hub for science, technology and business, and we look forward to working with Element Six to deliver this exciting facility.”   

    Element Six has an outstanding track record of applying the extreme properties of synthetic diamond supermaterials within abrasive applications and a diverse range of advanced technologies. One of its many examples of commercialising innovation is the synthetic diamond speaker dome used in the Bowers & Wilkins 800 Diamond Series loudspeakers, for which Element Six has just been awarded a prestigious Queen’s Award for Enterprise in Innovation in the UK.

    Other innovative uses of Element Six synthetic diamond include optics to enable the highest power levels achievable in CO2 lasers for automotive engineering, as semiconductors in the Large Hadron Collider, as detectors in medical radiotherapy, as cutters for the fastest rates of penetration in oil and gas drilling, and to enable picks used during road re-surfacing and repair to last up to 40 times longer than standard road picks.

    About Element Six
    Element Six (www.e6.com) is an independently managed synthetic diamond supermaterials company. Element Six is part of the De Beers Family of Companies and is co-owned by Umicore, the Belgian materials group. Element Six is a global leader in the design, development and production of synthetic diamond supermaterials, and operates worldwide with its head office registered in Luxembourg, and primary manufacturing facilities in China, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, South Africa and the UK.

     

    About Harwell Oxford

    Harwell Oxford has a 60 year history of excellence in science and technology and is today being developed into a world-leading hub for technology transfer and innovative businesses as part of a joint venture by global property group Goodman, The United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority and The Science and Technology Facilities Council.

    Please visit: www.harwelloxford.com

  • Exclusive Discounts on Local Bus Services for Harwell Oxford Staff

    Feb 17, 2012 at 4:28:06 PM by Dawn Russell - Tags: - Comments (1)

     

    In December, the Thames Travel 32 and X32 services were revised to provide better links between Harwell, Oxford, Didcot, Abingdon, Wantage and Chilton. The South Oxfordshire Zone product available through the Oxford Bus Company's key smartcard also expanded to include travel on Oxford Bus Company and Thames Travel services in areas such as Abingdon, Didcot, Wantage, Wallingford, Wootton, Radley, Garsington and Watlington.

     

    You can see the full South Oxfordshire Zone map here.

     

    The key is available to purchase from the key website, but you can get further discounts through the Keylink employee scheme if your Harwell Oxford employer is participating. The prices are below:

     

    1 Week 4 Weeks 13 Weeks 1 Year
    (7 Days) (28 Days) (91 Days) (365 Days)
    South Oxfordshire Zone £15 £40 £100 £280
    Normal Commercial Rate £18.00 £46.00 £120.00 £365.00
    Harwell Keylink Discount £3.00 £6.00 £20.00 £85.00
    Effective cost per week… £15.00 £10.00 £7.69 £5.38
    All Zones £22 £65 £195 £580
    Normal Commercial Rate £25.00 £77.00 £230.00 £690.00
    Harwell Keylink Discount £3.00 £12.00 £35.00 £110.00
    Effective cost per week… £22.00 £16.25 £15.00 £11.15
    All Zones includes  SmartZone™ and  South Oxfordshire Zone

     

    If you have any questions on Keylink or are an employer at Harwell Oxford who'd like an application pack, then please contact  keylink@oxfordbus.co.uk

     

    For timetables on Thames Travel services please visit:  www.thames-travel.co.uk


  • Light Reading short story competition

    Oct 31, 2011 at 6:51:49 PM by Silvana Westbury - Tags: - Comments (0)

    Diamond Light Source, the UK's national synchrotron science facility, is inviting the public to let their imaginations run away with them around the 562m particle accelerator and write a short story for a new national fiction competition, Light Reading.

    Light Reading is open to everyone and participants are invited to write a story of up to 3,000 words that is in some way inspired by Diamond. Plot lines can feature the synchrotron machine itself, the science that takes place on the 19 experimental stations, the scientists and technical people working at Diamond, or any other aspect of the facility that captures the imagination. Stories can be in any genre and there is no minimum word limit. For those with limited time or a more minimalist approach to writing, there’s also a Flash Fiction category for stories under 300 words.

    A dedicated website -  www.light-reading.org - has been set up to give participants a wealth of information on Diamond and the wide range of experiments that are carried out here. There will also be an opportunity to visit the synchrotron, date and details for this will be posted on the competition website shortly. All entries need to be submitted via the  Light Reading website

    Diamond will make an initial shortlist of the best stories and these will then be judged by an expert panel. The top three writers will receive a cash prize – first prize £500, second prize £250 and third prize £125. These, along with those highly commended by the judges, will then be published in an anthology of short stories.

    The deadline for entries is Wednesday 30 November 2011.


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