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After 20 years, OSU�s Center for Automotive Resarch leads way in transportation technology

The Ohio State University Center for Automotive Research celebrates its 20th anniversary this week with a day-long seminar and celebration that will culminate in the unveiling of  blueprints for CAR’s expansion -- and the center’s roadmap for the next 20 years.

It's been a long, fruitful journey so far.

“We’ve grown from (virtually) nothing to a $7-million operation, and we expect to keep growing,” says David Emerling, industry collaboration director for the program.

CAR, an interdisciplinary research center within OSU’s College of Engineering, was founded 20 years ago with funds raised by OSU’s managing interest in the Transportation Research Center in Marysville (TRC Inc. is owned by Honda, which chartered the university to run the operation).

By the mid-90s, CAR had its own campus facility and today, its 35,000 square-foot digs house engine and vehicle dynamometers; acoustics labs, intelligent and autonomous vehicle laboratories; combustion research facilities; hybrid-electric propulsion, fuel cell and electrochemical energy storage facilities.

 “In our last ten years we’ve been very entrenched in battery research,” Emerling says. Leading the electric-race car pack since the 1990s, CAR’s engineering team set the 2010 land-speed record with the Venturi “Buckeye Bullet,”  the first fuel-cell vehicle to reach 300 mph.

The architectural studies to be unveiled at Friday’s ceremony are the initial steps in CAR’s expansion from a research center within the College of Engineering to the larger Transportation Research Institute of Ohio.
“We focus ourselves on all ground transportation, not just automotive,” says Emerling. With financial support from a $3-million Ohio Third Frontier grant and continued partnerships within the transportation industry in both Central Ohio and abroad, CAR’s progressive research encompasses everything from electric cars to heavy trucks, advanced electric propulsion to alternative fuels.

OSU CAR’s 20th anniversary begins Friday with three professional development seminars, a classic and specialty car and motorcycle sShow (during which visitors can test student-built prototype vehicles), followed by the unveiling of CAR’s future plans.

Source: David Emerling, CAR
Writer: Kitty McConnell

OSU College of Medicine lands $1.4-million grant to study brown algae's burn-healing power

In the world of medical research, the simplest answers can come from the strangest places. In the case of bacterial infections that take place after major burns, the answer may very well come from the sea.

Researchers at the Ohio State University College of Medicine, working with researchers in Norway, have landed a $1.4-million defense department grant to study the use of sea-produced brown algae and kelp to fight infections common to burns.

"The grant comes from the Department of Defense because of soldiers who suffer major burns in Afghanistan or Iraq," explains Dr. Chandan Sen, professor and vice chairman of research at OSUMC's Department of Surgery and one of the study's leaders. "Most of those burns get infected by bacteria like pseudomonas that thrive in desert areas. These bacteria form a biofilm, which defeats the kinds of antibiotics we typically use. They form a protective layer that antibiotics can't penetrate, and the infection gets worse. If you can't control the infection, ultimately it could lead to amputation or even death."

Though the genesis of the study was overseas casualties, the results of the study will have an impact worldwide. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, biofilms are linked to 60 percent of all chronic infections in the United States, even with its higher standard of health care. Pseudomonas itself was once responsible for more than half of all burn deaths in the U.S. Though that's no longer the case, the bacteria are living things, able to adapt. Over generations, they developed the ability to form the antibiotic-resistant biofilm.

The sea plants, Sen says, contain chemicals that have been shown to shut down the bacteria's ability to form that biofilm, once again making them vulnerable to common antibiotics.

"Once we can halt the production of the biofilm, we can kill the bacteria, and cure the infection," Sen points out. He doesn't find the answer to the biofilm problem odd, however.

"The fact of the matter is that bacteria are a part of nature and nature has its own way of controlling them," he says. Otherwise, bacteria would run rampant over the rest of the natural world.

"We humans can't produce the same chemicals, but nature has always had the answer," he says. "We're just looking to find a way to adapt nature's answer for use on humans."

The study, which has just begun and is expected to take a year to complete, includes researchers from OSU's Comprehensive Wound Care Center and the Dorothy M. Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute, along with their Norwegian colleagues.

Source: Dr. Chandan Sen, Ohio State University College of Medicine
Writer: Dave Malaska


Ohio TechAngels grows to largest angel group in U.S.

Ohio TechAngels may not have been Ohio's first angel fund, but since its founding in 2004 it has grown to become the largest --  not just in Ohio, but in the entire United States.

Earlier this month, Entrepreneur pegged the Columbus-based investment group as the largest in the country with 282 members, ahead of Los Angeles's Tech Coast Angels, with 263 members.

Cleveland-based North Coast Angel Fund also made the top 10 list, coming in fifth with 180 members. Ohio was the only state with two angel groups in Entrepreneur's top 10.

John Huston, who formed Ohio TechAngels in 2004, says there never was a plan to grow the group to any particular size.

"I moved back to Ohio from Boston, where I was a banker, and after a year I was bored," he remembers. "What I missed was working with CEOs."

But when he looked for an angel fund in which to become involved, he could find none in central Ohio, he says. So, to learn how to start his own, he enrolled in a boot camp run by Ohio's first angel fund -- Cincinnati-based Queen City Angels.

Since then, Ohio TechAngels has offered three funds and made 53 investments in 33 Ohio-based, tech-related companies, Huston says.

He says Ohio's angel environment has four things going for it. First is the Ohio Technology Investment Tax Credit, which gives angel investors a 25 percent tax credit for investing in Ohio-based tech startups. Second is the Ohio Third Frontier's Innovation Ohio Loan Fund, which lends money to early stage companies.

"If you're an investor, that's non-dilutive capital, which increases return for shareholders," Huston says. "It provides access to debt before any commercial bank will lend to them. Half of the companies we've invested in have been able to borrow under that program."

A third strength of Ohio's angel environment is what Huston calls "a great infrastructure of incubators" that are equipped to assist early stage companies in ways that help them succeed. And fourth are the pre-seed grants provided by the Third Frontier, he says, noting that a substantial part of Ohio TechAngel's three funds -- some $6 million -- has consisted of state grants that include money from the Third Frontier. 

In the end, Huston says, it's not about how many members Ohio TechAngels has, but how many companies they help.

"The myth is that angels are a bunch of geezers with a lot of money who are trying to make a lot more money," he says. "What we're really trying to do is make meaning -- by building entrepreneurial wealth."

Source: John Huston, Ohio TechAngels
Writer: Gene Monteith


Venturi Motors sets sights on electric car production within two years

The Buckeye Bullet attracted Venturi Automobiles to Ohio. But a perfect mix of conditions could keep it here and result in all-electric cars being produced in Columbus in the next two years.

Venturi, a Monaco-based company that builds electric vehicles, announced in January that it was establishing North American headquarters at TechColumbus, located on the Ohio State University campus. Since then, Venturi North America has been working through regulatory requirements for manufacturing cars here while continuing to partner with OSU engineering students and the university's Center for Automotive Research (CAR) on the experimental Buckeye Bullet, which has continually set land speed records (see our story in July 28 issue).

"A few years ago the owner of the company, Gildo Pastor, got involved in the Buckeye Bullet during the hydrogen run when it was using fuel cells," says John Pohill, an industry veteran and CEO of Venturi North America.

Pastor "fell in love with speed and became a donor to CAR and to the university," Pohill explains. "In their attempt for that speed record, they talked about what would be next, and Gildo, being an electric car manufacturer, said maybe we can go to electric, and that's exactly what happened. He became even more involved."

When Pastor decided to establish North American operations, Pohill says, "the perfect spot was Columbus because Ohio State was here, the Buckeye Bullet was here and a great deal of other activities relating to the electric car."

Venturi North America announced at the Detroit Auto Show in January that it would build its America automobile in Ohio. Pohill describes the America as a "buggy style vehicle. It's all electric, it's purpose-built in that it was not a change from another vehicle. The other discussion we had was whether to build it for the masses or to make it what Venturi is known for, which is a high-end performance car. We still haven't come to a final decision on that, but it looks more like it's going to be something that's not exorbitantly expensive, but it also won't be cheap."

Pohill expects to hire several employees in the next month to assist with such things as marketing, engineering, finance and dealer development.

"Eventually I want to hire a younger staff, bring some of the OSU students in, and really create a small car company somewhere from 70 to 100 people," Pohill says.

In the next year, Venturi will complete regulatory work and testing of the America to ready it for production, Pohill predicts. "Within two years we'll launch it and get it out on the highway," he says.

But stay tuned: Pohill says the company plans to unveil a brand new car at the next Detroit Auto Show. And, eventually, there might be an elecric motorcycle in the works.

Source: John Pohill, Ventui North America
Writer: Gene Monteith

pH Matter foresees big market by thinking small

Catalysis -- the process by which one substance creates or affects a reaction in another -- is, experts say, present in 90 percent of all commercially produced chemical products. From catalytic converters to fuel cells, petroleum refining to margarine, catalysts are used to produce desired reactions as part of the manufacturing process.

A Columbus-based startup in the TechColumbus incubator sees a future in the development of application-specific catalysts, but they're thinking very, very small.

pH Matter, LLC, has already received grants for research on projects for NASA and the National Science Foundation (NSF). For NASA: a catalyst for the continuous formation of carbon in a carbon dioxide and hydrogen-fed system to remove carbon dioxide from the cabin of manned space craft. For NSF: a contaminant-resistant catalyst for use in production of fuel from biomass.

Ultimately, however, the company wants to be a manufacturer of nano materials, carbon "doped" fibers for use in metal-air batteries, fuel cells and industrial electrolysis.

"Our core technology is fabrication of doped nanofibers for energy storage," says Paul Matter, Ph.D., president and founder. "This is something I worked on in grad school. I saw that a lot of other applications were arising, so I thought this would be a good basis for a company.

"The doping means we're taking carbon and replacing an atom with boron or nitrogen and when you do that it changes the electronic properties of the carbon. By controlling the carbon at the nano scale you can get vastly different properties."

Currently. Matter and his busines partner, Christopher Holt, vice president and director of engineering, are producing the fibers only at lab scale -- a couple of grams at a time for properties testing. In 2012, however, the company plans to build a pilot scale manufacturing system at TechColumbus. And from there?

"Right now," Matter says, "Based on initial testing and customer feedback, we see potential opportunities for our materials in energy storage applications, fuel cells, capacitors. And we have had some early conversations with battery and fuel cell manufacturers."

Source: Paul Matter, pH Matter
Writer: Dana Griffith

PercuVision brings sight to tricky catheterizations

It's an unpleasant scene, but one that occurs daily in medical centers around the world. A person needs a urinary catheter. The nurse begins to place it. The catheter encounters an obstruction, so the nurse pulls it out and tries again. And again.
 
A Westerville company, PercuVision, has come up with a camera-aided alternative to make such a situation safer and more bearable. Called DirectVision, the technology is being used by nurses around the country.

"We added vision to urinary catheterization," says founder and CEO Errol Singh, who also practices urology at Capital Urology in Columbus. "As urologists, we have scopes in our hands that give us vision, and we use that primarily for diagnostic and other procedures, but the nurses unfortunately don't when they run into a difficult catheterization. (Now) the nurses can see what the problem is and are able to turn it and guide it."

PercuVision was founded in 2007, and DirectVison received FDA approval in August of 2009.

"It took time to make it through the commercialization process and get our supply chain established and so forth," says Singh. However, since then reception of the product "has been very very positive on a number of fronts. The technology is being embraced system wide in OhioHealth and we have the technology deployed in approximately six or seven sites around the country. We probably have another dozen or so sites that will be getting the technology soon."

OhioHealth, through the OhioHealth Research Institute, has supported Singh's work by facilitating clinical trials designed to confirm the device's effectiveness, he says. Other supporters include angel investors (who have funded the company to the tune of $6 million) and the Ohio Department of Development, which earlier this year awarded PercuVision a $1-million grant to develop the next generation of technology.

While the company currently employs 15 people -- 13 of whom are located in Ohio -- PercuVision plans to hire an additional 42 people in the next three to four years as the next generation of vision-guided catheters come to market.

Source: Errol Singh, PercuVision
Writer: Gene Monteith

Heath-Newark-Licking Port Authority opens new office space, cleanroom facilities

Building a new 45,000 square-foot combination office and clean room building was a leap of faith that has paid off for the Heath-Newark-Licking County Port Authority.

On July 13, the authority dedicated the building while the building's first tenant -- Goodrich Corp. -- cut the ribbon.

In fact, the port authority had Goodrich in mind when it decided in in October 2009 to authorize architectural and engineering work for the building -- all on spec, says Rick Platt, the port authority's president and CEO.

The port authority was created in 1995 to take over ownership of the Newark Air Force Base after it turned up on the base closure list. Since then, the authority has served as property owner and landlord to 17 contractors and subcontractors focused on guidance systems and metrology at the 350-acre Central Ohio Aerospace and Technology Center.

"Goodrich," says Platt, "came as a subcontractor, and they've been growing over the years. At one point they were in 15 different places on our campus. We knew we needed to do something to get them consolidated and get them into modern office space." Otherwise, he says, "we would have lost them."

While Goodrich had not yet agreed to a lease, the port authority proceeded with the new building -- dubbed the Horton Building -- just the same. The gamble paid off: Goodrich moved into the building's first floor one year to the day after construction started.

Remaining portions of the building are available for additional tenants, including a new 1,000-square-foot Class 10,000 clean room to go with the 250,000 square feet of clean room space now leased to Boeing. Platt says the new facility is the only clean room space available in central Ohio.

"It's a pretty narrow niche, but if you need it it's pretty hard to get."

Source: Rick Platt, Heath-Newark-Licking County Port Authority
Writer: Gene Monteith

JointVue's imaging tool works to improve joint diagnostics

What's really going on with that knee that's giving you trouble? A new device from JointVue, with headquarters in the TechColumbus incubator, may soon give your orthopedic surgeon the ability to see and hear the problem.

JointVue Vision-D Plus, a medical device that combines 3-D ultrasound and Joint Sound (vibration analysis) allows analysis of joint abnormalities through the use of vision and sound -- in real time. The company says a major benefit of the technology will be the capture of 3-D dynamic joint motion, without exposure of the patient to radiation. In addition to competing against X-ray, 3-D computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and fluoroscopy, JointVue is maintaining 3-D anatomic joint databases expected to be of interest to orthopedic companies.

JointVue Vision-D is one of four tools under development to make treatment of joint abnormalities simpler and more precise. Joint Guide, will allow scanning of the joint to allow more precise placement of injectables.

The venture is lead locally by Chief Medical Officer Ray Wasielewski, M.D., a board-certified orthopedic surgeon who specializes in minimally invasive hip and knee replacement.

"These new technologies will allow us to move treatment of joint abnormalities into the offices of medical practitioners and away from the offices of specialists and hospitals, says Wasielewski, "and that will reduce costs."

Clinical trials of parts of the system are currently under way at Grant Hospital in Columbus, Hackensack University Medical Center in New Jersey and Vanderbilt University in Tennessee.

Sources: Ray Wasielewski, JointVue; company and industry websites
Writer: Dana Griffith


Tweet and Go Seek keeps Columbus followers on the trail of art & local brand value

#TAGS is no secret to Columbus metro residents. Columbusites (at least the 444 confirmed TAGS followers) have been playing Tweet and Go Seek since 2009. Tweet and Go Seek has been featured on every major Capital City news outlet -- TV, print and digital.

Yet the Columbus-based art-startup may come as a revelation to artists, entrepreneurs and marketing professionals beyond Central Ohio.

@Tweetandgoseek leaves a digital trail and Twitpic for Twitter followers to physically follow to a recognizable destination in the Columbus metro area. The first one there collects the "TAGS prize" -- a piece of original artwork redeemable as a gift certificate at a local caf� or boutique, restaurant or hotel.

In 140 words or less, @tweetandgoseek describes itself as "collectible artworks left around a city. partnering brands add a value to each one. photo/location/value tweeted. Followers chase it down to get the goods!" in its Twitter profile. Tweet and Go Seek creator Matthew Barnes has hidden "600+ pieces of @misterbarnes art hidden all over the city to date!" he said in a recent interview with @hiVelocity via Twitter.

Barnes launched the project during Columbus' 2009 avant garde art fair, Art Basel.

"TAGS is the inaugural campaign in a boutique arsenal of initiatives aimed at creating more active, direct engagement with consumers and greater ROI for brands with an included twist of collectible art while balancing itself between the social/virtual and physical worlds. I like to call it Art-vertising!" says Barnes.

Tweet and Go Seek vendor values average an 85 percent redemption rate with 180 percent spent over the value of the brand giveaway. Barnes charges vendors a nominal fee for each piece left for a TAGS seeker, with labor, design, social media marketing and the hiding factored in. Each participating business provides something of decent value, i.e. $10, $20, $100 off so that "people will feel obligated to compete."

Barnes' start-up has been successful enough that he hires people to hide TAGs pieces. "TAGS serves three purposes: a) To actively engage consumers and offer them an immediate value as well as something they may be inclined to collect which may increase in value over time�b) To offer brands a unique way to engage with existing and potential customers with immediately measurable ROI while combining their social reach with ours. And c), For people to �become familiar with an aspect of a particular artists work," says Barnes.

Source: Matthew Barnes, TAGS
Writer: Kitty McConnell

Yell Group acquires Znode

Znode, a Columbus-based leader in multi-store ecommerce, has been acquired by the Yell Group plc.

Yell Group, based in Reading, UK, announced in a July 11 news release that Znode will continue its Ohio operations and serve "as the development base for Yell's ecommerce capabilities."

Founder Vish Vishwanathan will serve as executive VP and general manager of Yell Connect while co-founder David Chu will serve as senior VP of technology. 

According to TechColumbus, the central Ohio technology business incubator, Znode was founded in 2007 and funded by TechColumbus, the co-Investment Fund, Ohio TechAngel Fund II and North Coast Angel Fund II.

Mike Pocock, Yell Group's CEO, said in the release that "The Znode team and their innovative technology provide Yell with a platform for our digital business and enable us to provide ecommerce solutions to small businesses, connecting them more efficiently with their local consumers. Their talented workforce and technological capabilities are a great addition to Yell as we move forward into new digital marketplace opportunities."

The release notes that Znode's platform enables businesses to "expand their online footprint using innovative multi-store and online franchising strategies."

Yell Group is a provider of print and digital services for consumers and small- to medium-size businesses within the local eMarketplace in the UK, US, Spain and some countries in Latin America.

Sources: TechColumbus, Yell Group

Make millions. Change the World. Wear Jeans.

Who wouldn't want to: Make Millions. Change the World. Wear Jeans? 

That's the motto of The Ohio State University's Business Builders Club, or BBC, a 10-year-old student-run group that promotes the entrepreneurial mindset to all interested students -- not just business majors. And 150 student members (many of whom already operate their own businesses or plan to) from varied backgrounds are proving the theory.

So, what can you do at a weekly BBC meeting?

- Take the floor for 60 seconds to pitch an idea or opportunity for collaboration on a new business venture.
- Embrace your inner nerd in an E-Ship Ed teaching moment to learn a basic business skill.
- Steal great ideas and laugh at the early failures of the weekly guest speaker.
- Critique each meeting component with your peers over pizza and cold beverages at a local tavern.

All of which will prepare you to enter one of the annual IdeaPitch Competitions and pursuade a panel of judges that you deserve their money and guidance.

As for the "Changing the World," part, incoming BBC President, Carol Walden says," the club's Alleviating Poverty Through Entrepreneurship Summit had over 1,000 people in attendance. The summit works every year to bring entrepreneurs from all around the country and globe to one place to talk about the social issues they are looking to resolve through innovative initiatives."

Ben Gilbert, a 21-year-old OSU senior and co-founder of Functional Delights, maker of Seize the Day (an app that has been downloaded by nearly 300,000 iPhone users) says he was heavily influenced by the Business Builders Club.

"We raised about 50 grand this year from the community. While most of those funds supported the summit, Gilbert notes, "We (also) funded a whole bunch of student businesses and gave away nine grand to businesses like mine. It's a pretty neat thing to be a part of."

Source: Carol Walden and Ben Gilbert, OSU Business Builder's Club
Writer: Dana Griffith


Endosphere's medical device promises inroads into problem of obesity

Endosphere was formed in 2006 to meet an urgent need for a less invasive, safer and more physiologic treatment for the growing problem of obesity.

Today, the Columbus-based company is attracting plenty of investors based on the promise of its SatiSphere duodenal insert, which company Chairman Christopher Thorne describes as "a breakthrough technology offering a safer and more effective solution for appetite regulation and weight loss compared to the market's currently available alternatives."

Thorne says current treatments involve potentially harmful chemical medications, invasive surgical procedures, or dramatic lifestyle changes that are difficult to maintain.

"The SatiSphere device is a small, non-invasive, pre-formed memory wire that uses the body's natural physiology to regulate appetite and satiation mechanisms which slow digestion and deter excessive eating," he says. Unlike other devices, it is not attached to the body but stays in place by conforming to the natural shape of the duodenum.

The device is inserted endoscopically in a 15-minute outpatient procedure. SatiSphere slows the passage of food through the duodenum and enables stimulation of the neurons along the duodenal walls, causing them to release the body's natural appetite-suppressing hormones. This enables an earlier feeling of fullness and extends the feeling of satisfaction between meals, Thorne says.

He lists its advantages as "its safety profile, patient tolerability, affordability, ease of reversibility and repeatability, and method for achieving satiation."

EndoSphere Inc. completed a clinical trial in patients in 2008. All of the patients lost weight, with an average excess weight loss of 12 percent during the first month. The company has been approved for an expanded multi-center clinical trial in Europe.

Earlier this month, the company announced completion of an oversubscribed Series A financing round led by Broadline Capital. Investors also include Glengary LLC, Physician Investment Group LLC, Ohio TechAngels, North Coast Angel Fund and Queen City Angels.

The company, which also focuses on innovative treatments for type 2 diabetes, has added two new Ohio employees in the past six months and plans to further expand in 2011.

Source: Christopher Thorne, EndoSphere
Writer: Gene Monteith


Seize the Day gives 21-year-old OSU student first taste of business success

Necessity may be the mother of invention, but too much free time doesn't hurt.

That's how Ben Gilbert, along with business partner Ian Kono, came to launch Functional Delights and their successful iPhone app, Seize the Day.

Gilbert is a 21-year-old computer science major who will graduate from Ohio State University in December. Kono is a UCLA grad working at Cisco Systems. The two met in 2009 while Cisco interns in San Jose, Calif.

"I moved to a new city and didn't know anyone," Gilbert explains. "So, I decided I was going to tackle learning iPhone development. And I did so with my roommate Ian, who would eventually become my co-founder. Once we figured our skills were sufficient, it was like what better way to put them to the test than make something that we need?"

What they needed was a decent mobile "to-do" management solution that didn't cost an arm and a leg.

"Both of us noticed that with the existing solutions in the App Store there was a big divide between really crummy free ones . . . and these enterprise solutions where you end up paying 100 bucks," Gilbert says. "We launched, and within a two-day span we were featured on the front page of the App Store and generating like 10,000 downloads a day."

Seize the Day differs from other to-do apps in its simplicity and ease of use, Gilbert says. Users can choose from a simple task menu marked "today," "upcoming," "at some point" or "view all." Tasks can be tagged for easy searches and marked complete when fulfilled. The app also has a daily reminder that alerts users each morning to the tasks of the day.

Since its launch last July, iPhone users have downloaded nearly 300,000 copies and give it a 4.5-star rating. Revenue from ads are "paying somewhere between beer money and the salary I want to make when I graduate," Gilbert says.

Next to be released is Zero, a paid revenue model that offers users the ability to sync up their iPhone calendar with their computer.

Source: Ben Gilbert, Functional Delights
Writer: Gene Monteith

Syscom helps aerospace industry shed unwanted pounds

In the aerospace industry, weight is a big deal. An industry rule of thumb is that for every pound you can take out of a big bird like the Boeing 737, you save $1 million over the life of a plane.

Syscom Advanced Materials is helping to save weight on the 200 miles or so of wiring in a typical plane by providing electrically conducive polymer/metal hybrid fibers that are significantly lighter than the typically-used nickel-copper wires.

The Columbus company was founded in December 2005. Its products are based on needs that founder Jar-Wha Lee recognized while working at the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton and were developed under a federal Small Business Innovation Research grant, says Jeff Martin, Syscom's business development manager.

"He was doing some research there around making lightweight wires and he saw an opportunity for a business that people in the Air Force and aerospace industry were looking for," Martin explains.

The company's first product was Amberstrand Fiber, which is widely distributed to the industry in products crafted by Glenair, a California-based maker of electrical connector accessories.

"It's been on the market commercially for three years now. It's used heavily in the aerospace industry for EMI shielding (electromagnetic interference -- think of the buzz you get in your cell phone if it's too close to a radio)," Martin says.

The company recently introduced its new Liberator fiber. That product, which uses a different polymer than does Amberstrand, is still being evaluated with customers to determine its range of applications, Martin says.

"If you're comparing us to a nickel-coated copper wire, we're about 87 percent lighter and up to 26 times stronger than the copper wire. From a flexibility standpoint it's orders of magnitude greater."

The company's administrative offices and product development labs are housed at TechColumbus, with its manufacturing facility nearby. Martin reports that the company is growing, adding 12 new jobs in the past three years. The company now employs 15, he says, and expects to grow further through the year.

Source: Jeff Martin, Syscom Advanced Materials
Writer: Gene Monteith

Dublin Entrepreneurial Center to open new international business assistance program

The Dublin Entrepreneurial Center (DEC) wants to help local entrepreneurs with their international goals and to attract businesses from around the world. That's why it's opening new incubator space called The Dublin International Business Assistance Center.

The new center, which opens next week, will provide office space, conference rooms, and access to technology and other resources. The new center will be a kind of "incubator" for local entrepreneurs seeking international markets or partners, as well as a local resource for international business leaders looking for a foothold in the huge American market.

DEC, a partnership between the city of Dublin and TechColumbus established in April of 2009, is now "home" to 50 tenants. Monthly meetings facilitate networking, shared technology, funding and education. Specialized events also help to stimulate local and international interest in the center's offerings.

Dublin was recently named a "Top Seven Intelligent Community" by the Intelligent Community Forum for the second year in a row, and many area companies boast significant international operations.

"We are the first TiE [The International Entrepreneur] chapter outside of Cleveland, and we're developing relationships with a number of organizations, like the Asian Indian-American Business Association," says Dana McDaniel, Dublin's deputy city manager and director of economic development.

"We introduced what we call a 'Green Integrator' to focus on green companies, and we now have 11 green startups in the entrepreneurial center, doing collaborative-type projects. We have companies that focus on 'clean' diesel; we have companies doing LED lighting, solar panels, and a couple of companies that do energy audits and architectural work."

Source: Dana McDaniel, City of Dublin
Writer: Patrick G. Mahoney

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