Mission: The mission of the Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication is to drive Australian innovation of micro/nano technologies by providing an open-access design, build, test and scale-up pipeline that is underpinned by cutting-edge facilities, equipment and expertise.
Vision: The Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication aspires to be a world leading hub for development and realisation of breakthrough technologies harnessing micro and nanofabrication. The Centre aims to catalyse research excellence and jumpstart commercial translation/scale-up for academic and industry clientele.
16th
Overall percentile
32nd
Research percentile
9th
Innovation percentile
84th
Societal percentile
Evolution of the institution
The following data gives a quick reading on the scientific performance in the last years. The research ranking refers to the volume, impact and quality of the institution's research output. The innovation ranking is calculated on the number of patent applications of the institution and the citations that its research output receives from patents. Finally, the societal ranking is based on the number of pages of the institution's website and the number of backlinks and mentions from social networks.
Compared to its context
The result of the evaluation of the institution can be compared to obtain a view of the country, the region to which it belongs and the institutions of the world, placing it in their respective positions.
Compared to All sectors (percentiles)
Compared to Government sector (percentiles)
Ranks by Subject area
We have divided the scientific output of the institution into 19 large areas of knowledge and the following table shows only the ranks in different territorial domains achieved by the institution in each of the areas.
For an institution to have a presence in an area, it is necessary that it exceed in the last year a minimum output threshold equivalent to twice the percentage that this area represents in the world.
If you need scientific indicators on these areas visit Scopus and/or SciVal
These are the journals used by the institution's researchers to publish their work in the last year. The size of each circle represents the value of the SJR of the publication, and its spatial position represents its subject matter.
This visualizatión allows you to identify the knowledge areas where the institution has published, recognize the prestige of the scientific journals in which the institution knowledge has been published, and identify predominant scientific communities.
Where is the institution located?
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