The University of Manchester

The University of Manchester is recognised globally for its pioneering research, outstanding teaching and learning, and commitment to social responsibility. We are ranked the 6th best university in the UK and 52nd in the Academic Ranking of World Universities (2024) and a member of the Russell Group.

The University of Manchester is home to the operational hub of the Henry Royce Institute and houses more than £200m of Royce facilities and equipment.

Central to the University of Manchester’s materials science activity is the Royce Hub Building, which was completed in 2020. The £105m, nine-story building contains over £50m worth of equipment and collaborative space for industrial and academic engagement. The building provides research capability for Advanced Metals Processing, Biomedical Materials, Chemical Materials Design, Material Systems for Demanding Environments, Nuclear Materials, Modelling and Simulation and Imaging and Characterisation.

The cleanrooms at the £61m National Graphene Institute (NGI) are home to some of Royce’s 2D Materials facilities. Scientists from the Nuclear Materials research area work in the Dalton Cumbrian Facility (DCF), a specialist radiation science and nuclear engineering decommissioning site. Cutting-edge characterisation facilities are available in the University’s Photon Science Institute and the Nancy Rothwell Building houses further Royce facilities for microscopy. The Manchester Institute for Biotechnology (MIB) hosts Royce’s capability in the Automated Discovery of Materials.

The range of facilities and equipment at the University shows the strategic importance of Royce and the interdisciplinary focus of its research activities.

The University of Manchester is home to Royce’s operations around a number of important innovation programmes and facilities including the National Centre for X-Ray Computed Tomography (NXCT), the Sustainable Materials Innovation Hub (SMI Hub) and the Centre of Expertise in Advanced Materials and Sustainability (CEAMS).

Our Facilities

Royce Hub Building

The £105m, nine-story building at the heart of the University’s Engineering Campus is the operational home to the Henry Royce Institute. The Royce Hub Building contains over £50m worth of facilities for Biomedical Materials, Advanced Metals Processing, Material Systems for Demanding Envirionments, Chemical Materials Design and Nuclear Materials research .

National Graphene Institute

The NGI houses Royce's Ultra High Vaccum facility for 2D Materials and
enables academics to work alongside industrial partners on new and exciting applications of graphene and other 2D materials. It is equipped with 1,500m² cleanrooms and the latest technology for nanoscale and characterisation projects.

Manchester Institute for Biotechnology

Royce facilities within the MIB focus around the Automated Engineering of Biology. The wider capabilities of the facility are specifically designed to accommodate a range of research needs, including anaerobic facilities so experiments can be carried out in an oxygen-free environment. Research is spread across three themes; chemicals and materials, food, energy and the environment, and medicine and health.

GEIC

The University is home to a number of world-class materials research and innovation facilities outside of the core Royce network. The Graphene Engineering Innovation Centre is one such facility. Located in the Masdar Building, GEIC provides scale up support from applications engineers and internationally renowned academics, working across a broad range of novel technologies and applications in 2D Materials.

Photon Science Institute

The PSI provides comprehensive photonic characterisation capability to researchers and delivers X-ray through to THz spectroscopy, imaging and characterisation of advanced materials. Equipment to support Royce's Research Areas for Atoms to Devices and Imaging and Characterisation are located within the facility. The PSI is also home to much of NXCT's capability at the University.

Dalton Cumbrian Facility

The DCF offers a dedicated research base for larger scale research in radiation science and nuclear engineering decommissioning, allowing scientists to simulate several decades of in-service exposure in an operating environment. The facility accomodate's Royce's capability in Irradiation Environments.

Nancy Rothwell Building

With over 250 laboratory spaces for both research and teaching, covering 19,000m2, this landmark facilities for Materials Science and Engineering research is home to many of Royce's microscopy facilities at the University of Manchester.

The University of Manchester's department of materials brings together some of the brightest minds across the country. We have physicists, chemists, biologists, medics, materials scientists and engineers all working together to design the materials of the future.

Philip Withers | Chief Scientist, Henry Royce Institute

Technology Platforms

Royce Technology Platforms are groupings of cutting-edge facilities and expertise. Each Platform has a Technology Platform Lead responsible for developing and enhancing the facilities and supporting related research activities which utilise Royce Equipment

UHV 2D Materials and Devices Assembly

The Royce ultra-high vacuum (UHV) 2D materials facility combines world-leading academic research and a unique equipment suite to enable further research, prototyping and feasibility studies of 2D material-based optoelectronic devices.

Materials Doping and Device Fabrication

This platform features a novel co-beam tool utilising the implantation capabilities of a liquid metal ion source (LMIG) and the positioning accuracy of an SEM, for localised area implantation or deterministic implantation.

Bioprinting

The Bioprinting Technology Platform is a national, open access facility that houses collaborative academic lab space and state-of-the-art equipment for production, testing and characterisation of 3D human tissue/organ analogues.

Fuels and Irradiated Materials Analysis

This platform houses state-of-the-art active equipment for the manufacture, testing and post-irradiation characterisation of α, β and γ active nuclear materials to support current nuclear power generation.

Polymer Characterisation, Processing and Synthesis

The Royce Technology Platform for Polymer Characterisation, Processing and Synthesis contains a unique combination of state-of-the-art equipment and capabilities available to assess material properties, performance, and durability.

Materials Development for Multidimensional Printing

Coming Soon...

Dynamic 3D Stimulus and Biomechanical Evaluation

Coming soon...

Thermomechanical Processing

Combining advanced capabilities in forging and hot rolling with cold rolling and sheet metal processing, enabling the development of the next generation of high-value added wrought metal products and processes.

Fibre Technologies

This platform enables innovative research for fabricating polymer and composite fibres for applications such as separation and filtration and batteries or hydrogen storage, and accelerating their industrial exploitation in the smart textiles, aerospace, automotive and health sectors.

HTHP Degradation Environments

This suite of autoclaves and recirculating loops is capable of testing materials in ultra-high purity, High Temperature High Pressure water environments relevant to light-water reactor nuclear power plants. Systems are capable of operating in hydrogenated, oxygenated or mixed water environments with lithiated, borated or potassiated water chemistries achievable.

Irradiation Environments

This platform is focused on understanding of the complex interactions between ionising radiation and materials or processes. To enable this research, the facility houses large-scale sources of ionising radiation and a range of material modification, characterisation, and analytical equipment.

Automated Engineering of Biology for Materials Discovery

This platform hosts a suite of instrumentation for the rapid discovery and engineering of biological systems for the manufacture of advanced Materials from Biology and bio-based materials for clean growth.

Bioelectronic Interfacing and Electronic Characterisation

Coming soon...

Advanced Coating Technology and Performance

Coming soon...

Advanced Metals Processing

The Advanced Metals Processing research area aims to build on the UK’s strength in metals processing and provide the support needed to deliver innovative metals processing technologies and novel alloy solutions.

Our focus on metals process innovation is the gap between small-scale laboratory metals processing and the industrial scale. Through a combination of small-scale experiments, materials characterisation, and modelling, our aim is to develop an integrated computational materials engineering approach to metals processing across the whole manufacturing process. This will enable the UK metal industries to transition to a resource efficient, zero-pollution, digitalized and agile future.

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Atoms to Devices

The vision of the ‘Atoms to Devices’ (A2D) Research Area is to provide the cross- disciplinary technology platforms to facilitate the accelerated discovery and development of new device materials.

A2D is the quantum scale engineering of new technologies, that can translate into applications ranging from photonics, imaging, semiconductors and sensors, through to energy storage, biomedical materials and quantum technologies.

The research area comprises modelling, design, growth, fabrication, characterisation, and testing of electronic, spintronic and opto-electronic devices. Application examples include development of electronic materials for the energy transition, and design of bioelectronic sensors to support personalised healthcare.

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Biomedical Materials

The objective of the Biomedical Materials research area is to accelerate its discovery, manufacture and translation into usable applications, enhancing the UK’s position as an international leader in the fields of biomaterials and biomedical systems and devices.

Globally, the number of individuals aged 60+ is projected to reach 1.4 billion by 2030. In response to the change in the age demographic, a new generation of ‘smart dynamic’ biomedical materials are required to support novel medical approaches that sustain and improve human health and well-being for longer.

Materials for Personal Health has therefore been identified as a National Materials Challenge, which the Biomedical Materials research area feeds into.

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Chemical Materials Design

This area of research concerns new compositions of matter with tailored properties, which are crucial in solving critical issues in our time, from hydrogen production or catalyst design to polymer recycling.

The Royce platforms hosted within the Materials Innovation Factory (MIF) at the University of Liverpool focus on high-throughput discovery via a combination of in-silico modelling, computational design, and machine learning techniques supported by autonomous make-and-measure platforms.

In Manchester, the focus is to discover and develop sustainable new materials by biomanufacturing, as well as sustainable polymers for a circular economy with minimal impact on the environment.

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Imaging and Characterisation

The Imaging and Characterisation research area aims to provide access to the cutting-edge techniques across the entire scope of Royce’s research areas. This includes the specific expertise needed to describe and quantify the structure and properties of such a broad range of advanced materials. These techniques provide vital information to accelerate and support materials optimisation to improve performance, production, functionality and sustainability.

The applications of the Imaging and Characterisation capability across the partner institutes spans and complements the entire scope of Royce’s research areas and are vital in accelerating the development of advanced materials.

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Material Systems for Demanding Environments

The vision for this research area is to provide material system solutions to address the needs of energy and transport sectors.

Material Systems for Demanding Environments focuses on developing novel coating solutions, including coated light materials solutions for electrification, coating against hydrogen pick-up, and coating for extending temperature capabilities. This development brings new understanding of material ageing through environmentally relevant testing and characterisation, and the integration of mechanistic modelling contributing to Materials 4.0.

Progress in this area will enable new power generation concepts, dramatic improvements in efficiencies and reduction in waste leading to an overall reduction in emissions.

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Modelling and Simulation

Modelling and Simulation research aims to accelerate innovation in materials through physics-based modelling and computational simulation and facilitate collaboration between academia and industry.

Covering all the types of materials, numerous approaches to modelling and simulation exist across the full range of time and length scales where their behaviour is significant, from atoms and electrons to the scale of engineering components and beyond.

The Modelling and Simulation Research Area is integral to all Royce activities and serves as a key pillar of the Institute’s Materials 4.0 strategy, which drives the acceleration of materials innovation through digital methods.

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Nuclear materials

The Nuclear Materials research area aims to help increase the UK’s existing economic strengths and competitive advantages in nuclear energy, and support its net-zero ambitions, by enabling innovation in research on radioactive materials.

Next generation fission and fusion power stations require development of more resilient materials due to the increased demands they place on materials, from corrosion to high radiation fields and severe thermal loads.

This research also enhances modelling across length and time scales to aid in the development of new codes and standards, which will positively benefit new nuclear build and potentially have impact across multiple sectors.

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Two-Dimensional Materials

Two-dimensional materials (2DM) are few-atoms-thick crystals or layered compounds. Their list includes metals and semimetals, insulators, ferroelectrics, magnetics, and semiconductors with versatile mechanical, electronic, optical and thermal properties.

By exploring various families of 2DM, we identify their functionalities and employ those in developing composite materials. A small addition of a 2DM improves production and performance of components for automotive, aerospace, and various wearable applications.

Our research aims to maintain the UK’s leadership in 2D materials and nanomaterials composites, to develop new high-performance and energy-efficient materials for electronic devices, and to support innovation and production within the UK’s high-tech manufacturing sectors.

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Our Equipment

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