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2nd open call for Bilateral Technology Transfer Experiments (TTX)
Deadline: Jan 31, 2019  
CALL EXPIRED

 Entrepreneurship and SMEs
 Technology Transfer
 Sustainable Development
 Smart Cities
 IT Applications
 Horizon Europe
 Research
 Digital Society
 Internet of Things (IoT)

Project acronym: TETRAMAX

Project full name: TEchnology TRAnsfer via Multinational Application eXperiments

Project grant agreement no. 761349

Open call title 2nd open call for Bilateral Technology Transfer Experiments (TTX)

Open call identifier TETRAMAX-BILATERAL-TTX-2

Open call publication date 31.10.2018

Full open call information https://www.tetramax.eu/ttx/calls/

TTX online proposal submission platform http://tetramax.fundingbox.com/apply

TTX proposal submission deadline 31.01.2019, 23:59 CET (Brussels time)

Expected TTX duration; estimated TTX start and end date Between 6-12 months.

 

At the first day of the selected TTX starting month. Any date prior to May 1, 2019 is not possible. The TTX has to end by July 2020 at the latest.

Total financial support per TTX / TTX partner organisation

Financial support per TTX is between €20,000 and €50,000 maximum (for two partner organizations). On average, financial support of €35,000 per TTX is anticipated.
Funding will not be awarded to individual legal entities that have already received more than 100.000 Euro via open calls (FSTP) from H2020 I4MS and SAE projects.

Number and type of partner organizations involved in the TTX

One academic and one industry partner from two different EU countries or associated countries; in justified cases, both partners can be SMEs.

Language of the proposal

English

Request for more information

opencalls@tetramax.eu

The project TETRAMAX, co-funded from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under agreement No 761349, foresees as an eligible activity the provision of financial support to third parties, as means to achieve its own project objectives.

 

TETRAMAX and types of activities

Today’s European industries are challenged by the fast developing digitalization era, making it increasingly difficult for small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs) and mid-caps to keep track with, and benefit from, modern ICT for their business and production cycles.

The innovation action TETRAMAX aims to boost innovation by stimulating, organizing and evaluating different kinds of Technology Transfer Experiments (TTX). These co-funded “application experiments” connect SMEs and mid-caps with international academics, resulting in low-risk industrial adoption of novel computing technologies. TETRAMAX provides innovative advanced digital technologies for novel electronic and non-electronic products in the area of Customized Low-Energy Computing (CLEC) for Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) and the Internet of Things (IOT).

Additionally, building and leveraging a European Competence Center Network (CCN) on CLEC will increase the exchange of technologies and solutions, hence increasing the opportunities for technology transfers. In the long term, TETRAMAX will be the trailblazer towards a reinforced, profitable, and sustainable ecosystem infrastructure, providing CLEC competence, services and a continuous innovation stream at European scale, yet with strong regional presence as preferred by SMEs.

TETRAMAX is one of the new initiatives established under the European Smart Anything Everywhere (SAE) initiative which seeks to accelerate innovation within European Industries.

Further information on TETRAMAX:

  •   WWW: https://www.tetramax.eu

  •   Coordinator: Prof. Rainer Leupers, RWTH Aachen/DE, leupers@ice.rwth-aachen.de Goal of a bilateral TTX

During a bilateral TTX, one academic partner (publicly funded, university or research institution) based in an EU member state or associated country transfers a particular novel HW or SW technology in the domain of CLEC for CPS and IoT to a receiving industry partner (privately funded, preferably an SME or mid-cap) from a different EU member state or associated country. In justified cases, both partners can be SMEs, which means that one SME partner is the technology provider and the other SME partner is the technology receiver.

The receiving partner adopts and deploys this technology to enable improved products or processes (e.g. by gains concerning product cost, performance, or power consumption). Thereby, the technology receiver will achieve innovation and measureable impact, e.g. in terms of increased revenue or newly created jobs.



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