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PRESS RELEASE: PVA TePla AG: Focus on plasma processes and high-tech materials

DGAP-News: PVA TePla AG / Key word(s): Agreement PVA TePla AG: Focus on plasma processes and high-tech materials

02.12.2013 / 09:00

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Justus Liebig University Giessen and PVA TePla AG have signed a framework agreement with the Fraunhofer Institute for Surface Engineering and Thin Films - Strengthening of the high-tech location in Central Hesse.

Justus Liebig University Giessen (JLU) and PVA TePla AG, Wettenberg, today signed a framework agreement with the Fraunhofer Institute for Surface Engineering and Thin Films (IST), Brunswick, establishing a working group for research into plasma processes and high-tech materials. The aim is to perform end customer-oriented research and development work for industrial companies.

'This cooperation in the field of applied plasma physics with industry and the Fraunhofer Institute for Surface Engineering and Thin Films demonstrates the success of our long-term strategy for developing the profile of material sciences in Giessen and establishing it as a center of excellence', said JLU President Prof. Joybrato Mukherjee. For the university, the Laboratory for Material Research (LaMa) is involved. LaMa is a grouping of the Chemistry and Physics faculties that jointly run the material science courses and work on large-scale research projects. Many of the research topics of LaMa are closely linked with the aspects covered by the new working group. For instance, in the LOEWE initiative RITSAT, which focuses on plasma and ion sources for aerospace propulsion, plasma diagnostics methods and the theoretical description of plasma processes are also being developed. And in the LOEWE initiative Store-E - a project on the storage and conversion of energy - the scientists are producing items including high-tech materials for energy applications by means of plasma-based deposition methods.

In particular, the expertise bundling within LaMa in the area of material synthesis, solid-state analysis, plasma diagnostics and the theoretical description of plasmas are a valuable supplement to the expertise of the Fraunhofer IST.

Prof. Gnter Bruer, head of the Fraunhofer IST, is delighted with progress so far: 'An ever-growing number of high-tech SMEs with the potential to expand their market position worldwide with their products and services or even become global market leaders are working at the Giessen-Wetzlar location, which focuses on optical, vacuum and plasma technologies. However, many SMEs cannot meet the necessary research and development capacity requirements for this growth by themselves. We try to fill this gap with our cooperative approach and support the companies by offering them our research and development capacity, just like all Fraunhofer institutes operating throughout Germany.' The working group is set to come into being on January 1, 2014.

Dr. Arno Knebelkamp, CEO of PVA TePla AG, will provide the working group with modern premises and infrastructure. He referred to the importance of the end customer-oriented research and development work that the interested companies have entrusted to this working group.

Project coordinator Peter Abel believes that the cooperation agreed here between the Fraunhofer Society, the university and industry strengthens the research and development location in Central Hesse. In particular, he feels that bundling the regional resources in terms of manpower and research equipment will result in an effective, cost-optimized development platform that will make the region more competitive, especially with regard to future technologies.

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PRESS RELEASE: PVA TePla AG: Focus on plasma processes and high-tech materials

Ukrainians' word for their new turmoil both elusive and rich

MOSCOW Soon after the current wave of protests arose in Ukraine, a new word appeared to describe them: Euromaidan. Already in wide use as a hashtag on Twitter, it's an intriguing invention linguistically rooted in both East and West, elusive to translate and an insightful glimpse into the country's troubled politics. Who coined it isn't clear, and it's become so popular that it seems almost to have sprung from the collective unconscious.

ITS ELEMENTS

The first part, "Euro," is clear on the surface: Europe. "Maidan" is obscure to Western ears it's a word of Persian origin, which likely entered Ukraine via the Ottomans, meaning "square" or "open place." However, translating it as "Europesquare" would be technically accurate but emotionally impoverished because both elements mean much more.

EUROPE

Ukraine is part of Europe geographically, but for the demonstrators and their supporters the concept of "Europe" has the resonance of a vision, vivid and frustratingly out of reach. To them, Europe implies genuine democracy, trustworthy police and sincere respect for human rights.

MAIDAN

In this usage, it refers to Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square), the central plaza of Kiev. Reconstructed after the devastation of World War II, the approximately 8-acre square is a rare Stalin-era public space neither bleak nor bullying, ringed by buildings tall enough to be impressive but not intimidating. The square's agreeable nature echoes in how Kievans talk of it on a sort of first-name basis: "Let's meet at Maidan."

But as with Europe, Maidan is as much an idea as a place. The square was the focal point of the Orange Revolution, the 2004 mass daily protests that forced the annulment of a fraudulent presidential election. In that role, Maidan became a two-syllable encapsulation of peaceful resistance and determined action. The symbolism is powerful enough that Ukrainian media have taken to referring to all the current demonstrations as Euromaidan, even if they take place on a "ploshcha," another word for square.

AMBIGUITY

However thrilling the 2004 protests were, the hopes attending to the spirit of Maidan were largely unrealized. The leaders who came to power after the demonstrations plunged into years of bitter quarreling, so severe that the government was frequently paralyzed. In 2010, disappointed Ukrainians chose Viktor Yanukovych as their president, the very man who was the nominal winner of the annulled election in 2004. The heroine of the Orange Revolution, Yulia Tymoshenko, was thrown into prison after being convicted of abusing her power while prime minister. In an ironic commentary, Oleksandra Shevchenko of the topless activist group Femen produced a series of videos incorporating social commentary and breast-flashing under the rubric of PMS Post-Maidan Syndrome.

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Ukrainians' word for their new turmoil both elusive and rich

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