UK looks to harness the power of sound waves

  

Prof. Subramanian has been handed the task of making the UK a world-leader in technology which aims to harness the

Commenting Prof, Subramanian said: “I am really excited to be awarded this chair position. This RAEng chair will help develop technology that will manipulate sound with the same ease and flexibility with which we manipulate light. This will enable many new applications and help establish UK as a world leader in this emerging technology field. ”

RAEng will offer long-term support to the ten “engineering global-visionaries” to develop areas of emerging technology deemed to have the potential to bring significant economic and societal benefits to the UK.

Supported by the UK government’s National Productivity Investment Fund, the Academy is committing £1.3million to each of the ten-year programmes which will enable engineers to focus on advancing the novel technologies from basic research through to real deployment and commercialisation.

In recognition of the importance engineering will play in driving these areas of innovation, which also includes robotics, emerging space technologies and next generation energy storage, the government has provided the Royal Academy of Engineering with a significant increase in funding to support the translation of research to application. The Academy has previously only awarded two of these Chairs, making single awards in 2009 and 2012.

Prof Subramanian will be leading research into novel user experiences by creating 3D printed structures that shape and sculpt sound fields. One past example of his approach is the shaping of sound to create Ultrahaptics, the company which uses ultrasound to create virtual buttons, switches and dials, as well as 3D shapes and virtual force fields, in mid-air.

As a RAEng chair, Prof. Subramanian will develop technology that electronically controls a 3D-printed object to shape sound. This could have a profound impact on consumer applications ranging from using sound to levitate objects in air to enabling new forms of wearable devices.

Professor Dame Ann Dowling OM DBE FREng FRS, President of the Royal Academy of Engineering, said: “Emerging technologies offer enormous opportunities for the UK, but often their potential is not widely recognised until it is championed by a visionary individual. The ten researchers who have been appointed as Chairs in Emerging Technologies are global leaders in their fields, seeking to transform their pioneering ideas into fully commercialised technologies with important and widespread applications."