Key Facts
The campus has been home to
the Daresbury Laboratory, a
world-class centre for accelerator science, for over four decades.
In 2005, the Cockcroft Institute and the
Daresbury Innovation Centre
were built alongside it, as part of a government drive to encourage
more commercially viable scientific research and knowledge
exchange.
As part of this initiative, Daresbury, and its sister site at
Harwell in Oxfordshire, gained the title of Science and Innovation
Campus. This major step forward was enabled by the laboratory's
existing critical mass of scientific expertise and unique
technological competencies.
Some Interesting Facts about Daresbury Science &
Innovation Campus:
- Staff at Daresbury SIC designed and built the word's
fastest 2D x-ray detector - the Rapid System. It
is used on the synchrotron radiation system (SRS)
and other synchrotrons worldwide.
- Daresbury staff designed and built the world's first
dedicated high energy synchrotron light source,
the SRS.
Synchrotron light has become a key tool for modern research and is
used in many areas of scientific and engineering investigations.
There are over 60 synchrotrons around the world. They have all
followed the lead of Daresbury Laboratory, where the first such
machine opened in 1980.
- The world's highest energy ion beam accelerator was
designed and built at Daresbury
Laboratory.
The Nuclear Structure Facility was a tandem Van der Graaff
accelerator which used intense ion beams to help reveal the
properties of the atomic nucleus under extreme conditions.
- The next generation of accelerator technology is being
designed at Daresbury Laboratory.
Current research will revolutionise the way accelerator light
sources are designed and open up new ways to study atoms and
molecules on the vanishingly small timescales at which they change
and react.
- The structure of the foot and mouth disease virus was
solved using the SRS by a team from Oxford
University in 1990.
The atomic level information they obtained was crucial in
developing effective vaccines against foot and mouth disease and is
paving the way for new treatments.
- The structure of the F1ATPase enzyme was solved using
the SRS by Sir John Walker, work which earned him
a share of the 1997 Nobel prize in
chemistry.
The F1ATPase enzyme makes the fuel that powers biochemistry in
every living thing. Its structure The membrane-bound enzyme is
curious, having a rotating central shaft that changes the
conformation of the active sites of the enzyme. Understanding how
it works is bringing new insight into metabolic disease.
- Studies of giant magnetoresistance on the SRS have
played a key role in the development of new
electronic memory devices that use spintronics, a
new form of electronics that uses the spin of particles to
record information.This is used in devices such as the
iPod, helping you fit more music into them.
- Zeolite molecules, one of the key ingredients in modern
washing powders were developed by a company using
the power of the SRS to resolve molecular
structures.
Zeolite molecules are like molecular sponges and the ones in
detergent. The holes in the molecular sponge are filled with
detergent which is released when the zeolite added to the water in
a washing machine. The holes then suck calcium ions from the water
to soften it in a way. This gives compact effective detergents with
minimum environmental impact.
- Daresbury Laboratory was the first place in the world
to operate a service for companies to access the
power of its unique synchrotron and computational
facilities.
The DARTS service allowed everyone from SMEs to blue chip
multinationals to use the Laboratory's facilities and the expertise
of its staff to develop better processes and products.
- Each year, over 3,000 members of the public come to the
Laboratory to hear about the latest developments
in science and technology and see the Laboratory's
world-leading facilities.
The Laboratory leads the public outreach programme for Daresbury
SICA similar number of school pupils are also inspired to follow
their interest in science by taking part in programmes and
activities either at the Laboratory or led by the Laboratory in
their school.