September 10, 2023

UH Mānoa postdoctoral researcher Kaylee Clark is developing a ring that can detect the presence of date rape drugs.

A wearable ring that detects date rape drugs and desalination technology that uses solar thermal conversion to convert seawater into fresh water are just two of the innovative projects that are being developed through an inaugural University of Hawaiʻi fellowship program.

Kaylee Clark

Launched and managed by the UH Office of Innovation and Commercialization (OIC), Patents2Products is a new and unique program to develop the next generation of technology innovators from within UH’s ranks of PhD candidates and postdoctoral researchers. The systemwide program is part of a $2.4-million grant from the Office of Naval Research.

Through the one-year program, Patents2Products Fellows will receive intellectual property training, technology transfer guidance and industry mentorship to translate innovative ideas into meaningful commercialization opportunities. This program takes what students have learned and researched during their time at UH to make meaningful impacts on the lives of people in many everyday situations.

Utilizing the National Science Foundation I-Corps™ Desert and Pacific Region Hub regional training program, fellows will assess the commercial landscape and leverage the Lean Startup methodology as a development tool for technology maturation, participate in professional development workshops, and engage in networking opportunities to seek future funding and cross-functional collaborations for continued venture development. Each fellow will receive salary compensation, a stipend for research supplies, and have access to state-of-the art facilities and specialized equipment.

“The Patents2Products program is the first-of-its-kind in the State of Hawaiʻi and is designed to mature the readiness level of UH-developed, impact-driven technologies in the blue economy and healthcare sectors,” said Steven Auerbach, interim director of OIC. “The program provides in-depth innovation and entrepreneurship training and experience to help develop the next generation of scientists and technologists to translate their world-class research into impactful, commercial products or services that can improve our everyday lives.”

The inaugural cohort of Patents2Products Fellows and their projects include:

Example of the body composition assessment technology

“Our mission for Patents2Products is to educate and empower young talent to develop the necessary skills to ripen and shepherd groundbreaking technologies to the marketplace, and explore new pathways to become STEM leaders of emerging industries of our future,” said Rebecca H. Chung, Patents2Products program lead and OIC associate director, innovation programs. “This exciting opportunity will provide fellows with transdisciplinary training to engage in cross-functional research that will build greater innovation capacity and opportunities.”

OIC will begin recruiting for next year’s cohort in fall 2023. An information session for interested faculty sponsors and applicants will be hosted on November 15, 2023. For updates and more information about the Patents2Products program, visit research.hawaii.edu/patents2products or email patents2products@hawaii.edu.

Source: A UH News story