RADiation and reliability challenges for electronics used in Space, Avionics, on the Ground and at Accelerators
Acronym
RADSAGA
Description of the granted funding
Reliability and radiation damage issues have a long and important history in the domain of satellites and space missions. Qualification standards were established and expertise was built up in space agencies (ESA), supporting institutes and organizations (CNES, DLR, etc.) as well as universities and specialized companies. During recent years, radiation concerns are gaining attention also in aviation, automotive, medical and other industrial sectors due to the growing ubiquity and complexity of electronic systems and their increased radiation sensitivity owing to technology scaling. This raises the demand for dedicated design and qualification guidelines, as well as associated technical expertise. Addressing open questions linked to respective qualification requirements, the proposed training network “RADiation and Reliability
Challenges for Electronics used in Space, Aviation, Ground and Accelerators” (RADSAGA) will for the first time bring together industry, universities, laboratories and test-facilities in order to innovate and train young scientists and engineers in all aspects related to electronics exposed to radiation. The expertise of the space and avionics sectors will be complemented with new and unique test facilities, design and qualification methodologies of the accelerator sector, promising for other
application areas. Driven by the industrial needs, the students will be trained by established specialists in all required skills, and acquire expertise through innovative scientific projects, allowing to: (i) push the scientific frontier in design, testing and qualification of complex electronic systems for mixed field radiation environments (ii) establish related courses to train future engineers/physicists; and (iii) issue design and test guidelines to support industry in the field, protecting European
competitiveness when radiation effects become as important as thermal or mechanical constraints for the aviation, automotive and other industrial sectors.
Show moreStarting year
2017
End year
2022
Granted funding
UNIVERSITE DE MONTPELLIER (FR)
1 051 502.4 €
Participant
UNITED KINGDOM RESEARCH AND INNOVATION (UK)
Participant
MAGICS INSTRUMENTS (BE)
Participant
UNIVERSITE DE MONTPELLIER (FR)
1 051 502 €
Participant
ZODIAC DATA SYSTEMS (FR)
Participant
UNIVERSITE D'AIX MARSEILLE (FR)
Participant
YOGITECH SPA (IT)
Participant
3D PLUS SA (FR)
262 875.6 €
Participant
BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCIL (UK)
Participant
CENTRE NATIONAL D'ETUDES SPATIALES - CNES (FR)
Participant
AIRBUS DEFENCE AND SPACE SAS (FR)
Participant
ACADEMISCH ZIEKENHUIS GRONINGEN (NL)
113 499.68 €
Participant
GRAND ACCELERATEUR NATIONAL D'IONS LOURDS (FR)
Participant
UNIVERSITETET I OSLO (NO)
Participant
UPPSALA UNIVERSITET (SE)
Participant
STUDIECENTRUM VOOR KERNENERGIE / CENTRE D'ETUDE DE L'ENERGIE NUCLEAIRE (BE)
Participant
EUROPEAN ORGANIZATION FOR NUCLEAR RESEARCH (CH)
655 699.49 €
Coordinator
KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN (BE)
1 002 240 €
Participant
OFFICE NATIONAL D'ETUDES ET DE RECHERCHES AEROSPATIALES (FR)
Participant
PAUL SCHERRER INSTITUT (CH)
Participant
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI PADOVA (IT)
Participant
Amount granted
3 882 976 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
European Training Networks
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
EXCELLENT SCIENCE - Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (5220 Fostering new skills by means of excellent initial training of researchers (5221 )
Topic
Innovative Training Networks (MSCA-ITN-2016Call ID
H2020-MSCA-ITN-2016 Other information
Funding decision number
721624
Identified topics
nuclear safety, nuclear reactors