CONTACT:
Jeanan Yasiri Moe
Director of Strategic Communications and Public Affairs
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MADISON, Wis. – The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation has nominated six exceptional UW-Madison technologies for its top innovation prize. Stay tuned as we prepare to unveil the two winning teams next week, celebrating groundbreaking advancements and the brilliant minds behind them.
Sign up for the WARF holiday greeting email list and be among the first to discover the winning teams.
Chosen from among hundreds of innovation disclosures received by WARF this year, these six technologies stand out as promising early-stage solutions to real-world challenges. From pioneering materials to innovative tools aimed at enhancing human health, advancing renewable energy and breaking down ‘forever chemicals,’ these technologies exemplify the transformative work at UW-Madison.
“Our Innovation Awards highlight some of the most exciting early-stage discoveries on campus,” says Erik Iverson, CEO of WARF. “We are proud to celebrate the nominees and all UW-Madison innovators whose research positively impacts lives across our state and around the globe.”
An external panel of judges selects the winning teams, which each receive $10,000 awards, split among UW inventors.
Learn more and meet the 2024 WARF Innovation Award finalists:
Innovative Screening Tool Better Detects Likelihood of Age-Related Diseases
- Perry Pickhardt (Radiology)
- John Garrett (Radiology)
- Michael Kattan (Cleveland Clinic Foundation)
New Membrane Material Improves Long-Term Battery Performance for Energy Storage
- Xudong Wang (Materials Science and Engineering)
- Yutao Dong (Materials Science and Engineering)
New Way to Measure Arterial Stiffness Leads to Better Blood Pressure Treatment Plans
- Adam Gepner (Medicine)
- Ryan Pewowaruk (Medicine)
Simplifying the Process for Early Detection, Screening of Cancer
- Muhammed Murtaza (Surgery)
- Michelle Stephens (Surgery)
Converter Improves Efficiency, Stability of Power Transmission in Renewables
- Venkata Giri Venkataramanan (Electrical and Computer Engineering)
- Jinia Roy (Electrical and Computer Engineering)
- Dominic Gross (Electrical and Computer Engineering)
- Mahima Gupta (Electrical and Computer Engineering)
Inventive Electrochemical Process Breaks Down ‘Forever Chemicals’
- Song Jin (Chemistry)
- Katelyn Michael (Chemistry)
About WARF
Incorporated as a nonprofit foundation in 1925, WARF has a founding purpose “to promote, encourage, and aid scientific investigation and research at and within the University of Wisconsin-Madison.” Over 99 years the foundation has funded more than $4.5 billion in cumulative research grants to UW-Madison and the Morgridge Institute for Research (adjusted for inflation), has been issued more than 4,200 patents (with 2,200 active patents), generates an additional 375 invention disclosures and 55 revenue-generating licenses each year, and has helped create 190 startup companies based on UW-Madison technologies. For more information, visit warf.org and watch a video about how WARF stewards the Cycle of Innovation.
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