Cultured meat, the lab production of meat from isolated farm animal cells using tissue engineering techniques, is considered an alternative to meat, thus providing meat-like products with similar eating experience and nutritional values to animal-derived meat. Aiming for a low environmental impact and enhanced animal welfare, this alternative not only offers an available protein source for the world’s growing population, but also a more humane and sustainable one.

Cultured hamburger being fried

Cultured hamburger being fried

In the collaborative research by Prof. Machluf, Prof Fishman, and Prof. Davidovich-Pinhas from the Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Engineering at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, the researchers address some of the major technological challenges facing the cultured meat field: the development of technical solutions for scalable cell expansion, cell scaffolding, and cell-to-meat processing. The researchers introduced a new approach for the development of diverse cultured meat products, based on edible vegetable-based scaffolds in combination with vegetable-oil gel (oleogel) fat substitute. In this approach, cell expansion is carried out using microcarriers, which act as scaffolds for cell attachment and proliferation, thus enabling a scalable process in bioreactors. Since the microcarriers were designed from edible materials, they can be directly incorporated into the final cultured meat product without requiring any costly cell harvesting steps.

Another essential building block of cultured meat is a fat substitute, which contributes to its tenderness and juiciness as well as to the overall taste. To this end, a vegetable-oil gel fat substitute was developed and incorporated with plant protein. The novel formulation exhibited comparable appearance, color, and hardness to beef fat, with better nutritional values. Furthermore, due to its protein shell, the fat substitute could be easily combined with the protein-rich microtissues into a coherent structure.

Schematic illustration of the cultured meat platform. Edible microcarrier-derived microtissues are first produced in a scalable bioreactor and then undergo processing such as aggregation or homogenization. The processed cellular mass is further incorporated with an oleogel-based fat substitute followed by food processing methodologies to generate cultured meat prototypes. Created with BioRender.com.

Schematic illustration of the cultured meat platform. Edible microcarrier-derived microtissues are first produced in a scalable bioreactor and then undergo processing such as aggregation or homogenization. The processed cellular mass is further incorporated with an oleogel-based fat substitute followed by food processing methodologies to generate cultured meat prototypes. Created with BioRender.com.

Two types of cultured meat prototypes are described in the paper: layered cultured meat and burger-like cultured meat. The layered cultured meat prototype was produced based on microtissue aggregates that supported better stiffness and nutritional values, while the burger-like cultured meat utilized homogenized microtissues to imitate the marbling appearance of animal-derived meat.

Altogether, taking a multidisciplinary approach, this work establishes the technological basis for a unique cultured meat platform that may broaden the applicability of cultured meat products and accelerate their commercial production.

The study was conducted by postdoctoral fellows Dr. Jovana Glusac and PhD student Feng-Chun Yen. Additional contributors included Dr. Anton Zernov, senior research fellow Dr. Limor Baruch, and PhD student Shira Galperin-Levi from the lab of Prof. Machluf. The research was funded by GFI – The Good Food Institute.

The Formula Technion team has recently unveiled the 2023 race car, an autonomous electric vehicle, the first of its kind to be constructed in the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. The new car, unveiled at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering project fair, will compete this summer in Spain, Portugal, and Croatia.

Formula Technion 2023 team, with the new race car

Formula Technion 2023 team, with the new race car

70 students from multiple faculties took part in the planning and construction of the vehicle. These include the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, the Henry and Marilyn Taub Faculty of Computer Science, the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering, the Faculty of Physics, the Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and the Faculty of Materials Science and Engineering. The team is headed by Majd Jaraysi, a Bachelor’s student at the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, who’s been part of the team for four years running.

The new race car is a rear-wheel drive vehicle, with a single engine providing 81 hp. It weighs 260 kg, can reach 120 kph, and accelerates from 0 to 100 kph in 3.1 seconds.

The 1st autonomous electric vehicle developed at the Technion

The 1st autonomous electric vehicle developed at the Technion

The Formula Technion project was established in 2012 in the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering. From its first year, the team was winning prestigious prizes in European competitions. One of the vehicles constructed over the years was recognized as the lightest car in the world.

In addition to designing and constructing the race car, this year the development team started work on a rolling chassis made from composite materials, aiming to replace the current chassis, reduce weight and improve torsion resistance. The students believe this will be the first step in a new stage of research and development on the project.

This summer, the Formula Technion team raced at Formula Student Portugal and got 3rd place in Autonomous track and 6th in Electric track out of roughly 1000 universities participating.

Formula Technion Team – Summer 2023

They likewise placed 2nd in Formula Student Spain (static track) for their Business Plan presentation.

Formula Technion across the years

Technion news – July 2023 🎓🔬

This June, Technion held its annual Board of Governors meeting. Here are the highlights: Technion celebrates milestones, honours its friends, lays down infrastructure for new research. Read more here.

Researchers in the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering have demonstrated control over an emerging material, which they consider as a possible future alternative to silicon in microelectronics. This is a timely development, because  scientists and engineers face challenges in continuing the transistor shrinking trend, an important driver of computer chip performance.

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Lishai Shoham, Prof. Lior Kornblum

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Lishai Shoham, Prof. Lior Kornblum

Integrated circuits, more commonly known as computer chips, or simply chips, are at the core of modern life, responsible for processing, storing, and transferring massive amounts of data. Chips are responsible for countless tasks, including vaccine development, spacecraft designs, internet infrastructure, big data, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence, and the internet of things.

The continuous performance improvement of these chips has been driven by shrinking the size of the most basic logic “Lego” piece – the transistor. Transistors are miniature switches that control the flow of electric currents, analogous to a faucet controlling the flow of water. Already in the early 1960s, Gordon Moore, the founder of Intel, proposed that the transistors’ miniaturization rate should allow doubling of the number of transistors per area every 2 years. This prediction, coined Moore’s Law, has dictated the miniaturization rate for decades. Presently modern chips contain billions of transistors on about a square centimeter.

In 2007, Moore declared that his law would come to an end within a few years. The CEO of Nvidia expressed an even more pessimistic view last year, saying that “Moore’s Law is dead,” a view shared by other technology experts.

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Prof. Lior Kornblum and Lishai Shoham, in the lab

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Prof. Lior Kornblum and Lishai Shoham, in the lab

Professor Lior Kornblum of the Viterbi Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering explains that, “as a result of the continuous miniaturization, modern transistors are only a few dozen atoms across. Because they are already so small, continuing miniaturizing without compromising their performance is becoming increasingly challenging. On the nanometric scale, the transistors behave in new ways that are different than their larger predecessors.”

One manifestation of this problem is leakage of electric current when the transistor (switch) is supposed to be off. Prof. Kornblum explains that “it can be compared to a leaking faucet, multiplied by a billion; this could result in a lot of wasted ‘water.’ In a modern phone with billions of transistors, the tiniest current leakage will accumulate into a considerable waste of energy. This could quickly drain the battery and cause excessive heating of the device. Zooming out, when thinking server farms and data centers, the energy waste can be substantial and produce considerable heat.”

There are multiple approaches and strategies to tackle these challenges. One promising direction is the search for alternatives to silicon, the workhorse of today’s chips. Prof. Kornblum’s research group is studying various oxide materials, one of which has a useful property: it can switch from being an electrical conductor to an insulator – and back. The researchers want to harness this property for future transistors that could potentially switch more efficiently.

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Lishai Shoham, and Prof. Lior Kornblum in the Sara and Moshe Zisapel Nanoelectronics Center

L-R: Dr. Maria Baskin, Lishai Shoham, and Prof. Lior Kornblum in the Sara and Moshe Zisapel Nanoelectronics Center

Developing such a technology requires precise control of the material properties. The Technion researchers demonstrated a route for manipulating the material’s electric properties by precisely controlling the distance between its atoms. Laboratory manager, Dr. Maria Baskin, achieved this by using a unique oxide growth system; she deposited layers of atoms one on top of the other, thereby growing films of the material. Thanks to this delicate growth process, she was able to set the distances between atoms with a picometer (one-thousandth of a nanometer) precision. In comparison, the distance between two atoms in silicon is approximately one-quarter of a nanometer, or 250 picometers.

This unique oxide growth system was established at the Technion with significant investment, and it is the enabler for developing the next generations of semiconductors, magnetic materials, and renewable energy materials such as cutting-edge catalysts.

“Every morning, I come to the lab and ‘fire-up’ the system,” explains Dr. Baskin. “We can choose from a variety of atoms, control their arrangement and the spacing between them. Using these capabilities, we can even create materials that did not exist before, with a broad range of properties per our requirements.”

“The tools we’ve developed for the oxides growth are unique,” adds Prof. Kornblum, who heads the laboratory. “Oxide growth is only the first step. From there, the graduate students start their research. Some focus on the materials’ physical properties, striving to understand how they function, and some utilize these materials to fabricate electronic devices that we hope will revolutionize microelectronics, renewable energy, and other fields.”

The heart of the lab - the oxide growth system

The heart of the lab – the oxide growth system

Ph.D. student Lishai Shoham’s research addresses both of these aspects. She is studying the material’s properties and fabricating transistors from it, aiming to evaluate how it can be harnessed for microelectronics. In her latest scientific publication, Shoham led a team of twelve other researchers from eight research institutions and companies, located in Switzerland, Japan, France and the United States. The team showed that by stretching the material at the atomic level, the elongation of the chemical bonds between the atoms changes the electrical properties: stretching by less than 2% of the atomic bond length, the researchers reduced the electrons’ tendency to hop from atom to atom. Furthermore, this stretching changed how the atoms were arranged in space. Through these tiny changes, which take place at a scale of one picometer, the researchers developed the groundwork for controlling the material’s transition from a conducting state to an insulating state.

According to Shoham, “It is amazing to see that such minute changes in the material’s atomic structure have such a big impact on the electrical properties. We took this material to a synchrotron in Switzerland and saw how these tiny alterations affect the electrons’ arrangement in the material, as well as their behavior. These are the scientific foundations we need, in order to develop future transistors from these unconventional materials. Today, I am implementing the results of our research on related materials, from which I am developing a new type of transistor.”

According to Prof. Kornblum, “it is a great privilege to develop these capabilities here in Israel, to work with brilliant students and collaborate with the world’s leading scientists who contributed to this research. We are reaping the fruits of the excellent scientific infrastructure that the Technion is constantly developing and improving, and of our excellent students.”

The research was conducted at the Sara and Moshe Zisapel Nanoelectronics Center. It was funded by the Israel Science Foundation and supported by the Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute and the Nancy and Stephen Grand Technion Energy Program.

The atomic structure of the material strontium vanadate – illustration of the material’s atomic structure under stretching (right) and compression (left). The center shows the actual atomic arrangement, as imaged by an electron microscope. The bottom illustrates the effect of the stretching and compression on the material’s energy levels and therefore the way in which the electrons are arranged. By controlling these properties, the researchers intend to engineer these materials into future transistors.

The atomic structure of the material strontium vanadate – illustration of the material’s atomic structure under stretching (right) and compression (left). The center shows the actual atomic arrangement, as imaged by an electron microscope. The bottom illustrates the effect of the stretching and compression on the material’s energy levels and therefore the way in which the electrons are arranged. By controlling these properties, the researchers intend to engineer these materials into future transistors.

Read the full article here: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/adfm.202302330

On June 12, the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology inaugurated the Marc Hamon Anières House, a dormitory designed to house 120 students studying at the University who are a part of the Anières Program. The event took place as part of the Technion Board of Governors Meeting.

At the beginning of the Board of Governors meeting, Technion President Professor Uri Sivan awarded Marc Hamon the Guardian pin. The title of Technion Guardian is reserved for individuals who have achieved the highest level of support and commitment to the Technion.

The Anières students with the program’s directors and the Technion management

The Anières students with the program’s directors and the Technion management

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan said, “when Anières representatives first visited the Technion, many years ago, it didn’t take us long to understand that we shared the same values. The ensuing conversation was all about values, rather than bricks and mortar, and to this day values are the base of this special partnership. Anières is an inspiring program, and I hope that the partnership between us is for life. On behalf of the Technion, I tell you: we are proud of the Anières program, and fully committed to it!”

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Mr. Hamon studied at the ORT Central Institute in the town of Anières, Switzerland near Geneva – a place established from 1947 to 1997, to educate instructors then in 1959, engineers at the School of Engineers in Geneva. A few years after the closure of the Institute, the program was brought back to life in Israel with the help of Robert Singer, then CEO of World ORT, as an educational project of World ORT – Kadima Mada in collaboration with the Na’aleh program of the Ministry of Education, the Jewish Agency, the Technion, and the Wizo Nahalal Youth Village. The Anières House offers amenities such as shared study spaces, a club, a large balcony, a gallery, and more. It currently houses 120 students, a number that is expected to grow.

Mr. Marc Hamon at the ceremony

Mr. Marc Hamon at the ceremony

“It is a great pleasure for me to be here today to inaugurate the Anières House,” Mr. Hamon said at the inauguration ceremony. “This is a major milestone for the Anières Project. In 1999, I was visiting Geneva, accompanied by an Anières alumnus like me. It brought back memories of how much influence that school, created by Dr. Aron Syngalovski, has had on my life. I approached ORT, we started working with the Technion, and in 2013 we opened, with 30 international students studying in Nahalal. Now we finally have a building for our students, here, on campus, and our dream has become a reality. We dream of giving socioeconomically disadvantaged young bright students the opportunity to study engineering at one of the best engineering schools in the world. This is an opportunity better than the one we had.”

“In the Anières House,” he addressed the students, “you can feel at home, and study efficiently and pleasantly. It’s a center of life where you’re going to learn a profession, bond with other students, and make lifelong friends, which creates a special Anières culture. I hope the next generation of tech technology leaders is going to come from here and perpetuate the Anières dream.”

The years of their engineering or computer science degree, students receive financial, academic and social support. Thanks to a skilled team responsible for the progress of every individual student, extracurricular workshops, additional content, events and mutual responsibility, the Anières students become a strong and nurturing community.

From left to right: Mr. Robert Singer, Mr. Marc Hamon and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

From left to right: Mr. Robert Singer, Mr. Marc Hamon and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Mr. Robert Singer, co-founder of the program, said “The Anières project will change the lives of hundreds of students, becoming an engine of the future of Israel. It gives bright students the opportunity to succeed, in the location that would support and nurture them along the way. Thank you, Marc, for believing in this institution and in these young students! It is an honor for me to take part in this project. Marc Hamon was born in Morocco. In Anières, Marc Hamon was given an opportunity. He took it, and he triumphed in his career. And he never forgot it was his duty to likewise help others. I hope the students of today will one day be in the same position.”

Mr. Robert Singer at the ceremony

Mr. Robert Singer at the ceremony

Jacques Levy, President of Anières Alumni Association, also addressed the students: “I rejoice at the inauguration of this house. One hundred and twenty students from the Anières program already live here. This house will be the center of many social and cultural events. Our mission is to facilitate studies and open new horizons. We wish to nurture curiosity and a taste of adventure. You will become Technion engineers, but with a little something extra; you will be leaders. I wish you beautiful studies and great moments in your house!”

Mr. Jacques Levy, President of Anières Alumni Association

Mr. Jacques Levy, President of Anières Alumni Association

Yakira Hannah Bienenfeld, Anières student in the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, recounted how she moved to Israel during high school. “I’ve always dreamed about studying in the Technion,” she said. “I’ve heard about the Anières program, but only after joining, I realized how amazing it is. Marc Hamon’s vision is realized here every day. Ira, Yael and Mor are creating a close-knit community. On behalf of all Anières students, I thank Mr. Hamon and the team who led the inauguration of the Marc Hamon Anières House in the Technion – our new home!”

Ms. Yakira Hannah Bienenfeld

Ms. Yakira Hannah Bienenfeld

Technion Dean of Students, Professor Ayelet Fishman, the event’s Mistress of Ceremonies, said that the Anières House aims to be a “home away from home” for the students – a place where they would be able not only to study their chosen discipline, but also exchange ideas, spend time together, and form a social network that would stay with them throughout their career. “This was an important characteristic of Anières House in Switzerland, and that’s what Mr. Hamon wishes to give our students here.”

The Dean of Students, Prof. Ayelet Fishman

The Dean of Students, Prof. Ayelet Fishman

On Wednesday, May 24, the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology celebrated 30 years since its Excellence Program was established. The festive event, which took place in the Taub Auditorium of the Henry and Marilyn Taub Faculty of Computer Science, was attended by more than 200 of its alumni. This month, during the Technion’s Board of Governors’ meeting, the Program’s leaders received a special certificate of appreciation from Technion President, Prof. Uri Sivan.

The Technion Excellence Program is a unique academic program, personally tailored to each participant. Its purpose is to nurture curiosity, creativity, and in-depth study among students with leadership potential. Since it was established, more than 300 students have completed the Program, and many of them now serve in prominent leadership positions in academia and industry. Twelve members of the Technion faculty are alumni of the Excellence Program, and many other graduates are researchers and faculty members at other universities in Israel and around the world. There are currently 50 students enrolled in the Program.

Excellence Program Class of 2023

Excellence Program Class of 2023

The Technion Excellence Program was founded by Prof. Nimrod Moiseyev of the Schulich Faculty of Chemistry. Today it is headed by Prof. Eitan Yaakobi of the Taub Faculty of Computer Science, who is also an alumnus of the Program. Its Coordinator is Melinda Margulis.

At the conference opening, Prof. Yaakobi said, “the Excellence Program is the flagship program of the Technion and the Israeli academia. It aims to educate Israel’s future scientists and researchers, and, as such, enables and encourages students to pursue an interdisciplinary curriculum. Participating students, all of whom are of course academically outstanding, receive the tools and the opportunities to join various research laboratories at the Technion and conduct research during the early stages of their undergraduate studies. During their studies, numerous students in the Program actively contribute by publishing significant papers.” Program participants live together in the dorms, free of charge, receive a modest living stipend, and have their tuition entirely covered.

From left: Current program head Prof. Eitan Yaakobi, student Roy Dayan, and Melinda Margulis.

From left: Current program head Prof. Eitan Yaakobi, student Roy Dayan, and Melinda Margulis.

The 30th-anniversary event  opened with greetings from Technion President, Prof. Uri Sivan; Prof.  Moiseyev, the Program’s founder; and Prof. Yaakobi. Keynote lectures were given by Prof. Ido Kaminer, who is an alumnus of the Program and is a current faculty member at the Viterbi Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering; and Program alumnus Dr. Yair Wiener, who is the CEO and founder of Jether Energy Research. These lectures were followed by talks given by students currently in the Excellence Program, as well as alumni, including Dr. Kira Radinsky, CEO of Diagnostic Robotics and a research fellow in the Taub Faculty of Computer Science at the Technion; Prof. Orr Dunkelman of the University of Haifa; Limor Dori Alon of Unipharm Ltd.; Prof. Nadav Cohen of Tel Aviv University; and Dr. Yaniv Altshuler, who is a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

A special panel featured Professor Hagit Messer-Yaron, who was, among other distinctions, president of the Open University and chief scientist of the Ministry of Science and Technology; Technion alumnus Aharon Aharon, who was the CEO of Apple Israel and CEO of the Israel Innovation Authority, and has been awarded the Technion Alumni Medal this month; and Dr. Eyal Hulata, the former head of Israel’s National Security Council and a former national security advisor who is currently the chair of Halman-Aldubi Technologies Ltd. The panel discussed “Academia, Industry, and the Defense Ecosystem,” and was moderated by journalist Chen Liberman.

Click here for the conference program.

 

 

On Tuesday, June 13, 2023, the cornerstone was laid for the Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Computer Data Center. An agreement documenting the cornerstone was signed by the Rosmans, Technion President Professor Uri Sivan, and Dr. Rafi Aviram, the Technion’s Executive Vice President and Director General. The ceremony took place during the Technion’s annual Board of Governors meeting.

Signing ceremony for the Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Data Center. From left to right: Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion; Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan; Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman

Signing ceremony for the Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Data Center. From left to right: Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion; Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan; Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman

Professor Avigdor Gal of the Faculty of Data and Decision Sciences, who was the master of ceremonies, said that “The Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Computer Data Center will offer students and faculty members from a range of disciplines access to some of the best supercomputing capabilities in the world. The Center will elevate the Technion to an international computing level, and the new building will give the Technion both physical security and cyber security at the highest level.”

Technion President Sivan told the audience about his meetings with the Rosmans, recounting that “all of these meetings were very special for me, since I felt an immediate bond with you and your warm and generous approach. Recently, we bestowed on you an honorary doctorate and I was very moved to see you with dozens of students from the Rosman Atidim program, who are able to devote all their time to their studies thanks to your support.”

The Technion President added that, “the need for very fast computers is growing exponentially and it is very difficult to catch up in terms of infrastructure. Thanks to you, we will have a new building that will house the finest processors in the world and will provide the Technion, our researchers and our students with the enormous computing power their R&D requires. In the name of the Technion, I thank you for your generosity and for your deep friendship.”

Cornerstone laying ceremony for the Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Data Center. From left to right: Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion; Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman; and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

Cornerstone laying ceremony for the Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Data Center. From left to right: Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion; Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman; and Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan

In his remarks, Dr. Martin Rosman said, “The Technion’s management clarified to us that the project of highest importance for which the Technion needs our support is the High Performance Computer Data Center. Our most important mission in the last 15 years has been to support students, but we understood that the students also need this computing infrastructure, and this is what the new Center will give them and the Technion’s researchers. Thank you all – and see you at the building’s inauguration ceremony.”

Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General, said, “computers are at the heart of technology, but people are at the heart of the Technion. Thanks to your generosity, Martin and Grace Rosman, our IT people will be able to provide optimal service and facilities to the Technion’s researchers. This is also a great opportunity to salute the Technion’s Division for Computing and Information Systems, whose staff stood at the forefront of the efforts to overcome the cyber-attack we recently experienced. I would also like to thank my predecessor, Professor Boaz Golani, who initiated the idea of establishing the Center, as well as the staff of the Technion’s Construction and Maintenance Division and our friends at the American Technion Society, the Technion friends’ association in the United States. I am full of hope that in three years’ time we will reconvene here for its inauguration.”

From left to right: Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman; Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan; and Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion

From left to right: Dr. Martin and Grace Rosman; Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan; and Dr. Rafi Aviram, Executive Vice President and Director General of the Technion

The establishment of the new center was also made possible through the generous support of the Zuckerman Institute, Gil and Michal Frostig, and other dedicated supporters.

According to Prof. Ofer Strichman, the Technion’s Deputy Vice President for Computing and Information Systems, “in many scientific research projects, the researchers simulate natural processes using computers; for example, the creation of a black hole or supernova, or chemical and biological systems through which the properties of various molecules are analyzed, or the possible effects of drugs. This type of computing requires large-dimension parallelism: sometimes, for a single simulation, thousands of computing cores must run continuously for several weeks. As a result, for many segments of contemporary science, scientific achievements and significant breakthroughs depend on the computing infrastructure available to the researchers. The Martin and Grace Druan Rosman High Performance Computer Data Center will offer researchers similar computing infrastructure than in the world’s leading universities, and in some regards, even superior.”

At a festive event that formed part of the Technion Board of Governors meeting, seven distinguished individuals received Technion Honorary Fellowships. One of the recipients, Mr. Moriel Matalon, thanked the Technion and said that science saved his life. Speaking on behalf of the honorees, Ms. Janet Shatz Snyder, said “the Technion was founded one hundred years ago, because of a belief that science and education are key to the prosperity of the Jewish People. Over a hundred thousand students have graduated since that day, and the Technion has become one of the world’s leading universities.”

Honorary Fellowship honorees, L-R: Avraham Ashkenazi, Murray Dalfen, Cathy and James Deutchman, David Hankin, Moriel Matalon

Honorary Fellowship honorees, L-R: Avraham Ashkenazi, Murray Dalfen, Cathy and James Deutchman, David Hankin, Moriel Matalon

Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan welcomed the members of the Technion Board of Governors, and said, “the Technion has been pushing the boundaries of possibility and defying expectations since it opened its doors on the historic campus, in the winter of 1924, a quarter of a century before the Declaration of Independence. No one then could have anticipated the impact that the Institute would have on Israel’s economic development and global intellectual and scientific advancement. The Technion’s constitution of 1953, tasked the institute with pursuing its objectives, expanding human knowledge, education, and service to the State of Israel, ‘without discrimination against any person on the grounds of race, religion, nationality, or gender.’ This is the spirit and these are the values that have guided us for over a century. In these hundred years we watched the Ottoman Empire crumble, the British Empire dock in this harbor and then leave, two world wars transformed our globe, and the State of Israel rose from the ashes. There is an important lesson in this piece of rugged history of the 20th century: the importance of guiding values and principles in peaceful times and even more so, when sailing into the eye of a storm.”

Moriel Matalon addressing the audience

Moriel Matalon addressing the audience

Chairman of the Board of Governors, Mr. Scott Leemaster said, “Israel is a country in a desert, a democratic island amid a sea of non-democratic states, and the Technion plays an important role in that. We owe the Technion not only Israel’s technological success, but also its social wellbeing, its democratic spirit, the integration of different populations and the promotion of inclusivity and liberty, which form the foundation of a healthy society. A year has passed since the last Board of Governors meeting, and it has been a year of growth and prosperity.”

Chairman of the Board of Governors Mr. Scott Leemaster

Chairman of the Board of Governors Mr. Scott Leemaster

The ceremony was held in the presence of Technion President Prof. Uri Sivan, Chairman of the Board of Governors Mr. Scott Leemaster, members of the Technion’s management and Faculty deans. Prof. Wayne D. Kaplan, Vice President for External Relations & Resource Development, acted as Master of Ceremonies and welcomed guests and honorees. Dr. Orit Wolf, who has led the “Music, Science, Inspiration” lecture series through the year, partnered with Mr. Natan Datner, Israeli actor and singer, to give a special performance titled “Elvis and Frank”.

Gilad Dobrecki (percussion), Orit Wolf (piano), Natan Datner (vocals)

Gilad Dobrecki (percussion), Orit Wolf (piano), Natan Datner (vocals)

Honorary Fellowship recipients – Citations

Avraham Ashkenazi receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Avraham Ashkenazi receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Avraham Ashkenazi

In honor of your life-long connection with and devotion to Israel and the Technion, from which you hold two degrees; for leading by example at the American Technion Society and as a member of the Technion Board of Governors; with gratitude for your many contributions as a Technion alumnus and Guardian in support of graduate students and defense research.

Avraham Ashkenazi receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Murray Dalfen receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Murray Dalfen

In appreciation for your long-term dedication to the Technion and for continuing your family’s legacy of support; in recognition of your many years of devoted service to Technion Canada; with gratitude for your contributions as a Technion Guardian, including your generous support of water research; and in honor of your philanthropic activities in Canada, the United States, and Israel.

ג'יימס וקאתי דויטשמן מקבלים את התעודה מנשיא הטכניון פרופ' אורי סיון

Cathy and James Deutchman receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Cathy and James Deutchman

In honor of your lifelong devotion to and support of the Technion, Israel, and education; with appreciation for your furthering a multi-generational legacy of support for the Technion; in gratitude for your numerous contributions as Technion Guardians; and in recognition of your active leadership in the American Technion Society at both the local and national levels.

David Hankin receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

David Hankin receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

David Hankin

In honor of your inspirational contribution to the Alfred Mann Institute at the Technion and for your impassioned commitment to the integration of Technion biomedical technology within Israel and throughout the world; in admiration of your support of Technion faculty and students striving to translate scientific knowledge into life-saving technology; and for promoting ambitious biomedical innovation in Israel.

David Hankin receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Moriel Matalon receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Moriel Matalon

In recognition of your longstanding support in the development of the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and the Rappaport Family Institute for Research in the Medical Sciences, and for your unreserved support in establishing the Bruce and Ruth Rappaport Cancer Research Center, which is the realization of an academic, Zionist, and global vision.

ג'נט שץ שניידר מקבלת את התעודה מנשיא הטכניון פרופ' אורי סיון

Janet Shatz Snyder receiving the honorary fellowship from President Uri Sivan

Janet Shatz Snyder

In gratitude for your contributions as a second-generation Technion Guardian, support which spans a wide range of areas that assist Technion researchers in conducting their groundbreaking work; in acknowledgement of your outstanding dedication to the Technion as a leader and mentor in the American Technion Society; and in recognition of your service as a member of the ATS National Board and the Technion Board of Governors.

On June 22nd, the EuroTech Universities awarded three of their most promising early-career researchers for outstanding contributions to the 17 United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals. The EuroTech Future Award, a joint distinction of the six universities of science and technology awarded in 2023 for the first time, recognises researchers who have the potential to make a difference in their field and for society at large. Charlotte Vogt (Technion), Zongyao Zhou (EPFL), and Dinesh Krishnamoorthy (TU Eindhoven) received their awards during a festive ceremony in Brussels for their works on catalysis, wastewater recovery, and diabetes.

The three researchers came out on top in a field of 34 competitors. The award jury assessed the impact of the applicants’ work for achieving the sustainability goals set by the world community; the excellence of their research, and their ability to communicate about their research in a way that allows non-experts, particularly policymakers and citizens, to understand their contribution to a more sustainable world.

Anders Bjarklev, President of the Technical University of Denmark and President of the EuroTech Universities Alliance said: “Europe and the global society face many challenges that can only be solved with significant contributions from the research community – through scientific advancements and research-based entrepreneurship. The EuroTech Future Award highlights the passion, pursuit of knowledge, and innovative spirit of talented young researchers from our six universities. It honours them as essential change agents in the EuroTech Universities Alliance’s ambition to help secure a sustainable future.”

Tatiana Panteli, Head of the EuroTech Brussels Office and jury member commented: “It was inspiring to see the drive and the creativity of our early-career researchers. Their unwavering curiosity, innovative thinking, and fresh perspectives hold the key to unlocking solutions for the pressing societal problems we face today.”

Prof. Charlotte Voght's father receiving the award on her behalf

Prof. Charlotte Vogt’s father receiving the award on her behalf

1st Prize: Charlotte Vogt, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

The winner of the premiere edition of the EuroTech Future Award is Charlotte Vogt, who is an assistant professor at the Technion. She convinced the jury with her submission on “Carbon dioxide hydrogenation catalysis”. A short explanation of her research in her own words:

“A catalyst is something that can make chemical things happen that otherwise wouldn’t – it’s like a chemical magic wand. Catalysts accelerate the rate of a chemical reaction, so the reaction happens much faster and uses less energy. Catalysts are directly involved in about a third of the total global economy: from oil refineries to the food industry. I believe catalysts will also be key to solving global warming. Ultimately, the main problem of global warming is the increasing CO2 content in the atmosphere. So, one possibility is that we don’t let the CO2 that is produced in large industrial plants into the atmosphere but rather convert it into something useful with the help of catalysts, for example into materials or fuels. But the catalysts that we have right now are often not good enough, for example they cannot convert all the CO2. As a result, these processes are not yet economically viable. My research is mainly about developing new, better catalysts using so-called spectroscopic experiments to be able to study what happens during the CO2 reaction and use that information to make processes more efficient.”

Prof. Charlotte Vogt joining the event via Zoom

Prof. Charlotte Vogt joining the event via Zoom

2nd Prize: Zongyao Zhou, EPFL

The second prize goes to Switzerland, where Zongyao Zhou works as a postdoctoral scientist at EPFL. He researches “Membrane-based technologies for wastewater resource recovery and green energy exploitation”. Or, more specifically:

“I have developed a new type of microporous polymeric membrane that can quickly remove antibiotics and heavy metal ions from drinking water and efficiently extract lithium ions from seawater. My efforts align with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of promoting clean water and sanitation, ensuring healthy lives for people of all ages, and advancing affordable and clean energy. By creating a highly effective filtration system, our research has the potential to make a significant impact on global water quality and availability, ultimately improving the well-being of individuals and communities worldwide.”

3rd Prize: Dinesh Krishnamoorthy, Eindhoven University of Technology

Dinesh Krishnamoorthy, assistant professor in Eindhoven, ranked third in the competition. His research applies artificial intelligence in medical research; the title of his submission was “Transforming Diabetes Care: Personalized Insulin Dosing with AI Algorithms”.

“Diabetes requires careful management of blood glucose levels to prevent short-term and long-term complications. According to a 2021 report from the WHO, 72 million people worldwide require insulin treatment for diabetes management. The amount of insulin needed can vary greatly between individuals due to factors like genetics and environment, making personalized insulin dosing essential. My research has been focused on leveraging AI to develop personalized dose guidance algorithms for both type 1 and type 2 diabetes management that automatically learn the optimal amount of insulin needed for each patient without compromising their safety. These automated tools can reduce the need for specialist healthcare and make diabetes management more affordable and accessible for everyone.”

To read the full abstracts and to learn more about the winners’ backgrounds, visit https://eurotech-universities.eu/eurotech-future-award-2023/winners/. More information on the EuroTech Future Award can be found at www.future-award.eu.

About EuroTech Universities Alliance

The EuroTech Universities Alliance is a strategic partnership of leading European universities of science and technology joining forces to build a strong, sustainable, sovereign, and resilient Europe. The partners bring their excellence in research and education, their active engagement in vibrant eco-systems and service to society. Together, they join forces to accelerate their research in high-tech focus areas and advocate for change, through dedicated partners and a strong presence in Brussels. Based on the EuroTech values, the partners aspire to a new level of cooperation by bringing together their inclusive, diverse, and sustainable campuses. The EuroTech Universities create a unique environment for international talents to lead a new generation of change agents in research, entrepreneurship, industry, and society. Find more information on www.eurotech-universities.eu.

A legislative proposal to amend the Student Law of Rights is currently being debated. The proposal severely restricts freedom of expression for students and all citizens, denies the right to academic studies, and deprives individuals who express themselves in a manner that is not prohibited by law from holding an academic degree.

The proposed law seeks to transform academic institutions into an arm of law enforcement, obligating them to monitor students, investigate their activities, and impose academic penalties as a deterrent for expressing opinions and engaging in lawful actions unrelated to academia.

The Technion will not become an enforcement agency that pursues those who enter its gates. It will not impose academic sanctions as a means of criminal punishment beyond the scope of academic discipline, nor will it lend a hand to persecution. In accordance with its constitution and values, the gates of the Technion will remain open to everyone, without discrimination based on race, religion, nationality, gender, or political expression. This is how the Technion has operated since its establishment, this is how it operates now, and this is how it will continue to operate in the future.

The Technion Senate and the Technion Council reject the proposed law and call on the Israeli government, particularly the Minister of Education and the Knesset, to immediately terminate the legislative process.