Battelle Partners with Central State University to Incubate Clean, Green Products
The need to move green technologies into the
marketplace more quickly inspired a
partnership between Battelle's Environmental
Technology Commercial
ization Center and Ohio's
Central State University
(CSU) to launch the National
Environmental
Technology (NET)
Incubator in January, 2001.
The Incubator provides
start-up firms and
entrepreneurs access to
laboratories and equipment,
discounted office
space, business support,
and advanced information to
help them bring new technologies
to market, and offers CSU
students valuable experience. AMR
Technologies, the NET Incubator's first
tenant, has graduated and expects to move
into the National Composite Center in Kettering, Ohio to
complete development of a thermoplastic piece using waste
fly ash as a filler material. Fly ash produces plastic products
of light weight, high strength and impact resistancecharacteristics desired by, for example, the recreational
vehicle market. Technologies like AMRs that improve
efficiencies in the use of materials or energy are in demand
because they increase competitiveness.
Another tenant, Global Neighbor, is developing a batteryoperated,
environmentally friendly lawnmower. Their
innovative design dramatically lowers energy requirements,
which inspired four students in CSUs Manufacturing
Engineering Department to create plans for a manual push
version of the mower. The Incubator and the Department
applied to the National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators
Alliance for a grant to file for patents on intellectual property
developed by the students as well as for funding to develop
the mower prototype.
CSU students in the College of Business
and Industry, under the direction of
Professor Ted Sampson, will perform
market research studies for
the three incubator companies:
Global Neighbor, Welco and
New Concept Solutions.
These partnerships among
CSU and the Incubator
tenant companies
provide real-world
experience for students
and assist the entrepreneurs.
Funding from the
Delphi Foundation in
Dayton supports these
practical educational
experiences.
In 2002, the Incubator held
its first National Business Plan
Competition. The third place winner,
Crystal IS, recently received $1.16 million
from the Department of Defense to further develop their
aluminum nitride semiconductor, which could be used to
make blue-light emitting diodes (LEDs), high-density
optical data storage, as well as high-power and hightemperature
devices. Jerry Mahone, Executive Director of
the NET Incubator, stated that, “This year’s Business Plan
Competition was bigger and better than last year’s
inaugural event. Business plans were received from a larger
geographic area and the quality rivaled the quality of those
evauluated last year. The diversity of technologies this year
also exceeded those we received last year.” The business
plan competition was cosponsored by the Miami Valley
Economic Development Coalition and the Ohio Department
of Development, Office of Energy Efficiency. Global
Neighbor was the winner of the competition which was
held at Central State University on April 14, 2003.
For further information, please contact Mr. Harry Stone
at (513) 362-2602, stoneh@battelle.org.
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