NCN 2026 call timeline now available

Fri, 12/12/2025 - 12:00
Kod CSS i JS

We present a preliminary timeline for calls operated by the National Science Centre in the year 2026.

The call timeline does not include multilateral calls launched by the international networks of research funding agencies, including the NCN, which are announced and pre-announced on the NCN website all year round according to the decisions of the participating agencies.

2026 call timeline

TYPE OF CALL CALL ANNOUNCEMENT CALL DEADLINE CALL RESULTS
Weave-UNISONO continous call, in line with partner agencies call timelines depend on the time of publishing results by partner agencies

MINIATURA 10

continuous call, open from 2 February to 31 July 2025 November 2025 (last ranking list)

OPUS 31

PRELUDIUM 25

16 March 16 June December 2026

SONATA BIS 16

MAESTRO 18

15 June 15 September

March 2027

OPUS 32 + LAP Weave

SONATA 22

15 September 15 December

OPUS 32, SONATA 22 – June 2027

Weave – depends on the time of accepting evaluation results by partner agencies, November 2027 at latest

SONATINA 11

15 December 15 March 2027

September 2027


Download the NCN 2026 call timeline

Four Polish Researchers Among CoG ERC 2025 Winners

Tue, 12/09/2025 - 17:20
Kod CSS i JS

The European Research Council has just revealed the winners of its Consolidator Grant 2025. 4 out of 349 winners are former NCN grant winners affiliated with Polish research institutes: Dr hab. Wojciech Czerwiński, Dr hab. Maria Nowak and Dr hab. Michał Pilipczuk from the University of Warsaw, as well as Dr hab. Sławomir Porada from the Wrocław University of Science and Technology. Congratulations!

Maria Nowak, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UWMaria Nowak, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UW Dr hab. Maria Nowak works at the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw. Her research focuses on, inter alia, classic Greek papyrology, legal papyrology, legal practice in the Roman Empire, and issues of multi-legal systems in antiquity. She has received ERC funding of EUR 1.9 million for the project “A provincial capital polis at the end of the Roman era. Periphery or a center of power? (PeriPolis)” aimed to present the late Roman Empire as a state struggling with challenges strikingly similar to those faced by modern societies. Dr Nowak will seek to reveal whether crisis is an intrinsic feature of the collapse of empires, or whether the two phenomena may occur independently. She will also try to gain a deeper understanding of everyday life in times of decline – both for ordinary inhabitants and political elites. Maria Nowak is a former winner of NCN’s SONATA 9 and OPUS 18.

Wojciech Czerwiński, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UWWojciech Czerwiński, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UW ERC Consolidator Grants 2025 will also go to two researchers from the Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Mechanics at the University of Warsaw. They will both receive ERC grants for the second time. Dr hab. Wojciech Czerwiński received nearly EUR 2 million for his project “Reachability in Infinite Systems at High Resolution (POLARIS)”. The researcher works on computational models known as state-based systems, and will seek to solve one of the key dilemmas in computer science, namely the limits of achievability in systems with an infinite number of states. The bulk of his project concerns determining whether it is possible to devise an algorithm faster than existing ones that allows a given programme to move from its initial situation to its final one. Wojciech Czerwiński is a former winner of NCN’s SONATA 11.

Michał Pilipczuk, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UWMichał Pilipczuk, photo by Mirosław Kaźmierczak/UW Dr. hab. Michał Pilipczuk’s research focuses on graphs, which are fundamental mathematical objects used to model all kinds of networks. His project ”Towards a unified structure theory for dense graphs (WYDRA)”, which has been awarded nearly EUR 2 million in funding, will aim to develop a coherent and robust theory describing the structure of dense graphs. The results of his research will pave the way for many new applications – in both combinatorics and algorithm design and will indicate interesting directions for further research at the intersection of graph theory and theoretical computer science. Michał Pilipczuk is a former winner of NCN’s SONATA 6.

Sławomir Porada, photo by Politechnika WrocławskaSławomir Porada, photo by Politechnika Wrocławska For the first time, a CoG ERC was awarded to a researcher affiliated with a Wrocław University. Dr hab. inż. Sławomir Porada from the Faculty of Chemistry, Wrocław University of Science and Technology. He has received nearly EUR 2 million in funding for his project “Small Differences, Big Impact: Achieving Effective Selective Separations from Water by Tuning Ion Transport Processes”. Dr Porada will seek to better understand ion transport mechanisms for ions with very similar properties - especially how ions are adsorbed and desorbed over time in electrode materials. This will form the basis for developing a new class of separation processes that use not only material properties but also smart control of the process operating time and cycle. Sławomir Porada is a beneficiary of NCN’s research component under the NAWA Polish Returns Programme.

The ERC Consolidator Grant is one of the most prestigious international grant programmes. It is open to researchers who are 7 to 13 years after completing their PhD and can demonstrate outstanding scientific achievements. This time, a total funding of EUR 728 million will go to researchers from 44 countries, including 25 from Europe.

Online Lecture by 2025 NCN Award Winner

Tue, 12/09/2025 - 10:20
Kod CSS i JS

Together with the Copernicus Centre, we are pleased to invite you to an online lecture by Łucja Kowalewska (Membrane Labyrinths in the Nanoworld of Cells: From Geometry to Biological Functions) on 10 December, 6pm, as part of the “Science at the Centre” series.

Łucja Kowalewska, photo by Łukasz BeraŁucja Kowalewska, photo by Łukasz Bera Dr hab. Łucja Kowalewska works at the Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw. Her research focuses on plant cell biology, particularly on the structure and dynamics of plastid membranes. Last October, she was presented with the NCN Award for outstanding scientific achievements.

Her work focuses on periodic membranes, whose organisation plays a crucial role in cellular functioning – including plastid biogenesis and photosynthetic efficiency. Dr. Kowalewska’s team investigates how membrane structure influences biological function and which molecular and physicochemical mechanisms govern membrane transformations.

Dr Kowalewska’s research makes a significant contribution to understanding the relationship between membrane geometry and function. The researcher has demonstrated that the spatial organisation of membranes is not merely the result of the self-assembly of their structural components, but also actively regulates cellular processes – marking a shift in the existing paradigm of cell biology.

While her studies are primarily fundamental in nature, understanding the principles of biological membrane self-organisation also holds significant application potential. It provides a foundation for the design of biomimetic nanomaterials that may be used in medicine, pharmacy and food technology – for instance, as drug carriers, materials supporting tissue regeneration or smart coatings.

Footage on Dr Kowalewska’s research  

An online lecture organized by the Copernicus Center will be streamed on 10 December, at 6 pm.

In November, a lecture by Maciej Stolarski was delivered. On 17 December, a meeting with Bartosz Szyszko will be held. We encourage you to join it!

The first “Science at the Centre” lectures were delivered by the 2020 NCN Award winners. So far, 16 meetings have been held and we truly appreciate the Copernicus Centre’s support and assistance in their organization.

SONATA BIS 15 and MAESTRO 17 interview dates

Thu, 12/04/2025 - 08:00
Kod CSS i JS

Dates have been released for interviews in the calls launched on 16 June 2025. The results of the first stage of merit-based evaluation under MAESTRO 17 and SONATA BIS 15 will be published in the second half of December.

MAESTRO 17

  • NZ – Life Sciences: 27-29 January 2026
  • HS – Humanities, Social Sciences and Art Sciences: 4-6 February 2026
  • ST – Physical Sciences and Engineering: 4-5 February 2026

SONATA BIS 15

  • NZ – Life Sciences: 27-29 January 2026
  • HS – Humanities, Social Sciences and Art Sciences: 4-6 February 2026
  • ST – Physical Sciences and Engineering: 3-5 February 2026

Principal investigators will be interviewed in English. Researchers whose proposals will be recommended for the second stage of evaluation will be notified of the interviews 14 days in advance at the latest. Interviews will be held at the premises of the National Science Centre in Krakow and although principal investigators are required to participate in person, in exceptional and well-justified cases interviews may be held via available telecommunication tools. Failure to attend the interview will be regarded as a resignation from applying for funding. The cost of travel to and accommodation in Krakow will not be reimbursed.

Polish-Chinese Projects Awarded under SHENG 4

Thu, 11/27/2025 - 12:27
Kod CSS i JS

Under international SHENG 4 call for Polish and Chinese research projects, funding will be awarded to 21 projects with a value of over PLN 38 million.

Under SHENG 4 that has just been concluded, researchers could submit proposals to selected disciplines within three research domains. Out of 337 proposals, 229 were submitted to Physical Sciences and Engineering, 103 to Life Sciences, and only 5 to Humanities, Social Sciences and Art Sciences. Nearly PLN 22.5 million was awarded to 13 projects in Physical Sciences and Engineering and nearly PLN 16 million to 8 projects in Life Sciences. The success rate was 6.23%.  

Ranking List  

Polypeptides in Osteoarthritis Treatment

One of the awarded projects in Life Sciences, titled “Synthesis and Functionalization of Hyperbranched Polypeptides for Osteoarthritis Treatment”, will be headed by Dr hab. Monika Gosecka from the Centre of Molecular and Macromolecular Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences. Osteoarthritis is a disease mainly affecting the elderly that involves pain, stiffness and restricted movement. Currently, treatment usually involves anti-inflammatory drugs or joint replacement, which are known for their side effects and inability to regenerate joint cartilage. In healthy joints, cartilage is well hydrated, which results in an extremely low coefficient of friction, but is degenerated and damaged as the disease progresses. Hyaluronic acid injections, which are widely used today, have limited efficacy and require frequent injections. The aim of the project is to develop new formulations for delivery injections using hyperbranched polypeptides, the structure of which will make them durable and will provide excellent lubrication of the joint, easy application and drug delivery. To this end, a library of polypeptides with different structures will be synthesised and studied, and knowledge gained in this project will show the relationship between the structural features of these molecules and their biological activity, leading to a development of more effective methods in the treatment of osteoarthritis.

From Natural Grasslands to Agricultural Sustainability

One of the projects awarded in Life Science will be carried out by Dr inż. Piotr Niezgoda from the West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, who will study biodiversity and functionality of arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. In the face of continuous population growth and climate change, sustainable agriculture is becoming increasingly important, with its limited use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides that are replaced by microorganisms. Such microorganisms include arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, which live in symbiosis with most terrestrial plants. They improve plant productivity and nutrition, and alleviate the effects of stress. Despite their importance for the ecosystems and agricultural potential, little is known of the diversity of AM fungi in the world, their activity, response to climate change and the possibilities of using them in practice. The project “Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungal Biodiversity and Functionality” aims to fill the void by comprehensive studies of AM fungal communities in croplands and grasslands located in China and Poland that differ greatly in terms of climate and soil properties. Modern techniques will be used, such as amplicon sequencing, phylogenies, reconstruction, isolation of single spores, and mycorrhizal functional tests, to characterize the structure and function of AM fungal communities, reveal the mechanisms underlying agricultural impacts on AM fungal symbiotic functions, and explore their response to environmental factors. The results will enhance our understanding of AMF ecology and evolution, support biodiversity conservation, facilitate their agricultural application, and contribute to the classification of new species, e.g. under transcontinental AM fungal resource bank. The project continues former joint research that resulted in the description of new AMF species in 2022.

List of Projects Recommended for Funding under SHENG 4  

SHENG

SHENG 4 is the international bilateral Polish-Chinese Funding Initiative organised by the National Science Centre in cooperation with the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) pursuant to the parallel evaluation procedure, which means that both agencies perform a parallel eligibility check and merit-based evaluation and funding is awarded to projects recommended by both agencies. SHENG 4 was open to basic research proposals submitted to one of the following panes: HS6_01-HS6_08, HS6_14-HS6_15, ST4, ST5, ST8 and ST11, or NZ1-NZ9.

The winning projects will be performed in Poland and China, and each project will be supervised by two principal investigators, one for the Chinese research team and one for the Polish team. The Polish research team may use the awarded funds for research, remuneration of the research team, scholarships for students and PhD students, purchase or manufacturing of research equipment or other cost crucial to the Polish part of the project.

NCN Director in Governing Board of Science Europe

Thu, 11/20/2025 - 10:00
Kod CSS i JS

Prof. Krzysztof Jóźwiak, Director of the National Science Centre, has been elected to the Science Europe 2025–2027 Governing Board, which plays a key role in shaping strategic direction of Science Europe, an organisation connecting major European research funding agencies and research institutions.

Science Europe brings together 40 institutions from 30 countries and represents them in dialogue with EU institutions, prepares research policy recommendations, and reinforces international collaboration and research funding standards. The NCN has been a member of Science Europe since 2012, and as such has actively participated in its working groups, advanced research policy consultations and initiatives advancing research development across Europe.

Science Europe 2025–2027 Governing Board Members:

  • President (second term of office): Mari Sundli Tveit (Research Council of Norway)
  • Vice-President: Marcel Levi (Dutch Research Council, NWO)  
  • Vice-President: Francisco Javier Moreno Fuentes (Spanish National Research Council, CSIC)
  • Katja Becker (German Research Foundation, DFG)
  • Katarina Bjelke (Swedish Research Council, VR)
  • Anna Di Ciaccio (National Institute for Nuclear Physics, INFN)
  • Tjaša Dobnik (Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency, ARIS)
  • Christoff Gattringer (Austrian Science Fund, FWF)
  • Krzysztof Jóźwiak (National Science Centre, NCN)
  • Torsten Schwede (Swiss National Science Foundation, SNSF)
  • Christopher Smith (UK Research and Innovation, UKRI)

The Governing Board was elected at the General Assembly of Science Europe in Oslo, on 18-20 November. The event was accompanied by the annual High-Level Workshop on the European Research Area, a platform to discuss priorities of the next Framework Programme (FP10) to replace Horizon Europe, science diplomacy, responsible international collaboration, research culture, etc..

Nowo wybrany zarząd Science Europe, fot. Science Europe

LEAP-SE Cofund Call 2026: New Call on Energy Transition

Wed, 11/19/2025 - 14:30
Kod CSS i JS

The National Science Centre (NCN), in cooperation with the LEAP-SE (Long-Term Joint EU-AU Research and Innovation Partnership on Sustainable Energy) Network, is launching the LEAP-SE Cofund Call 2026 for international research projects in the area of energy transition and renewable energy. Funding may be requested by international consortia comprising partners from at least four European and African countries participating in the call.

LEAP-SE Cofund Call 2026 is open to funding proposals for research projects carried out over a period of 2 or 3 years in one of the following topics:

  • Assessment of Renewable Energy Sources (RES) and integration of RES in sustainable energy scenarios
  • End-of-life and second‐life management and environmental impact of RE components
  • Smart stand‐alone systems
  • Smart grid (different scales) for off grid application
  • Processes and appliances for productive uses (agriculture, mobility and industry)
  • Innovative solutions for priority domestic uses (clean cooking and cold chain)
  • Production and utilization of Green Hydrogen

Research consortia may comprise the following countries participating in the call:

  • Africa: Algeria, Cameroon, Egypt, Kenya, Morocco, Namibia, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia and LGI (African partners without funding organisations),
  • Europe: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Turkey, United Kingdom.

At least two project partners must originate from two different EU Member States or Horizon Europe Associated Countries and at least two partners must originate from two Member States of the African Union.

The call procedure is divided into two stages. In Stage I, joint pre-proposals are submitted with a foreign partner, and top-rated research teams are invited to submit their joint full proposals in Stage II. Submission deadline for joint pre-proposals is 5 February 2026 and the call results will be published by the end of November 2026.

The NCN Council has allocated EUR 750,000 for research projects carried out by Polish research teams participating in the LEAP-SE Cofund Call 2026.

Anyone interested in the call is welcome to take part in a webinar for applicants on 4 November. Register in advance here (mandatory).

LEAP-SE Cofund Call 2026 Call Text

Research into QD potential and legal exchange in Central and Eastern Europe

Tue, 11/18/2025 - 16:09
Kod CSS i JS

Over PLN 1.1 million for research conducted by Polish research teams with foreign partners. Two trilateral projects with Weave-UNISONO grants.

Dr hab. Anna Moszyńska from the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń will analyse and evaluate the legal exchange between Germany, Austria and Poland. Her project entitled ‘Legal Exchange in CEE: The Example of GmbH’ will be performed owing to collaboration between Austrian, German and Polish researchers with expertise in history, law and economy. The Austrian research team from the University of Vienna will be headed by Dr Kamila Staudigl-Ciechowicz, while Prof. Dr Martin Löhnig will head the German research team from the University of Regensburg. The proposal was evaluated by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and the evaluation results were approved by the National Science Centre and the German Research Foundation (DFG) under the Weave Programme. The Polish project budget is over PLN 650,000.

The legal exchange covers legal transfer as well as the migration of thoughts and ideas, which can take place at local, regional, national and global levels. The ideal example to capture this phenomenon as an example for legal exchange as such between these three states located in CEE is the institution of limited liability company (GmbH). The project covers three periods: 1897–1918 (legal exchange between Germany and Austria), 1918–1939 (legal exchange between Germany/Austria and Poland and development in the interwar period) and 1989–2024 (Poland's reorientation and the question of re-transfer). This will allow to indicate the background for the legal exchange process and the powers driving this phenomenon, to evaluate the material results of the legal transfer incorporated in the adopted legal acts, to show the further development and economic impact. This innovative project reaches beyond the domestic perspective and conventional framework of legal research and takes into account economic, social, cultural and interpersonal conditions.

Potential of Quantum Dots

The other awarded project will be performed by Dr hab. inż. Krzysztof Henryk Gawarecki and his team of researchers from Poland, Germany and Switzerland, who will study the key properties of strain-free GaAs quantum dots (QDs) and their application in quantum technology. The researchers will join forces to verify the potential of GaAs and provide a comprehensive experimental and theoretical description of their charge and spin properties. Research will help understand how the key physical properties of the GaAs QDs are determined by their shape, size, composition and environment. Scientists will then try to design strain-free QDs which will play an important role in quantum technology, specifically quantum communication and photonic quantum information processing.

The project GaAs Quantum Dots: from Form to Function’ will be carried out by the German research team headed by Prof. Arne Ludwig from the Ruhr University Bochum. The Swiss team involved in the project will he beaded by Richard Warburton from the University of Basel. The Polish research team will be awarded over PLN 450 thousand for the project to be carried out over the next three years. Proposals were reviewed by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) as the Lead Agency and the evaluation results were approved the National Science Centre and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under the Lead Agency Procedure.

Weave-UNISONO and Lead Agency Procedure 

The Weave-UNISONO call builds on the multilateral international cooperation between the research funding agencies associated in Science Europe and aims at simplifying the submission and selection procedures in all academic disciplines, involving researchers from two or three European countries.

The selection process is based on the Lead Agency Procedure (LAP), under which only one partner institution performs a merit-based evaluation and the others simply accept the result.

Under Weave, partner research teams apply in parallel to the lead agency and their respective domestic institutions participating in the call. Their joint proposal must include coherent research plans and clearly spell out the added value of international cooperation.

The Weave-UNISONO call accepts proposals on a rolling basis. Polish teams wishing to partner up with colleagues from Austria, Czechia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders are encouraged to read the call text and submit their proposals.

Nothing Works Without Fundamental Research

Fri, 11/14/2025 - 12:00
Kod CSS i JS

“I noticed that problems with products often arise from neglecting basic research. It is basic research that is essential for addressing applied or industrial challenges. Without solid foundations, nothing works," says Prof. Urszula Stachewicz, whom we interview as part of the #NCNinterview series.

Urszula Stachewicz, photo: private archiveUrszula Stachewicz, photo: private archive Professor Urszula Stachewicz investigates the electrospinning process as well as the surface and mechanical properties of polymer nanofibres. She is a member of the academic staff at the AGH University of Krakow. Previously, she worked at institutions including the Max Planck Institute, Delft University of Technology, Philips Research in Eindhoven and Queen Mary University of London. She has completed or is currently conducting five projects funded by the NCN, alongside research supported by the European Research Council.

Electrospinning is a technique for producing extremely fine fibres – with diameters in the order of hundreds of nanometres or micrometres – through the use of an electric field. It makes it possible to create lightweight, porous materials with a very high surface-to-mass ratio, whose properties can be precisely tailored by selecting the polymer and process conditions. As a result, electrospun fibres find applications in a wide range of fields, from medicine and filtration to energy technologies and smart textiles.

Anna Korzekwa-Józefowicz: Does business reach out to you? The technologies you are working on could make life easier in many ways.

Urszula Stachewicz: Let me tell you when business first contacted us. It happened after we appeared in articles prepared by The Economist.

At the time, we were working on so-called fog collectors – meshes designed to harvest water from fog, created with communities in regions affected by drinking-water shortages in mind. A journalist from London contacted us; he was very eager to write about this technology. An article was published, followed by a podcast. You can publish dozens of scientific articles – even in Science or Nature – and no one from industry will get in touch. Yet after a single article in The Economist, people from around the world began reaching out.

Did any of those conversations develop into collaborations?

This is a simple and useful solution, a technology from which companies cannot easily generate profit. It does not require specialised installation or advanced maintenance – and, naturally, a company must have a revenue model. The meshes can even be mounted independently on simple frames and used to collect water from fog, so little emerged from those contacts in practical terms – but it was a highly interesting experience.

And then, two years later, The Economist published another article on the subject – and again there was a surge of interest. However, none of this interest came from Polish companies; it was exclusively from international ones.

The very idea of recovering droplets of water is not new.

Fog harvesting was already known in ancient times. We have merely returned to it, adapting it to contemporary conditions.

Fog collectors are used primarily in regions with low rainfall – in South America, especially in Chile, as well as in parts of Asia. In Europe, they are used only rarely. Water obtained from fog is not perfectly clean – if it is intended for drinking, it requires additional purification. Fog carries various contaminants, including those originating from the atmosphere. For economic applications – in agriculture, livestock farming or irrigation – this water works extremely well. Such solutions are greatly needed in regions where water resources are scarce. 

The meshes typically cover an area of around 40 square metres. From such a surface – depending on weather conditions – it is possible to collect as much as 150 litres of water per day. As fog and wind pass through the fibres of the mesh, water droplets deposit and flow downward. A second mechanism also plays a role: condensation, which results from the temperature difference between day and night. It is precisely the same process that causes dew to appear on grass or on a windowpane in the morning. In nature, it is a highly efficient way of obtaining water.

In the regions I mentioned, such meshes are used by local organisations, foundations and community groups. Several companies manufacture these structures, and they can simply be purchased.

Since such structures are already used in practice, what did your team improve?

We incorporated electrospun nanofibres into the meshes, enabling them not only to collect water but also – when wind strikes their surface – to generate energy and measure wind strength. The functions we added transformed this solution into something more than a simple collector.

Nanofibres are much thinner than a human hair. Can they capture more water?

Yes. Traditional meshes have rather large openings, through which most of the fog simply passes without condensing on their surface. Our fibres have very high porosity – around 90 percent – and microscopic pores, which enable them to capture the smallest droplets of water, even those below one micron in size.

The idea emerged while I was working in London. At that time, I was studying the properties of nanofibres – including their wettability – for various applications, among them military uses, such as filters and masks. I knew how to control the structure of such fibres so that they would be hydrophobic, meaning water-repelling, or hydrophilic – water-attracting. At one point, I came across information about fog collectors and thought that our fibres could enhance their efficiency. We tested the idea and found that it indeed works.

Urszula Stachewicz with her team, photo: private archiveUrszula Stachewicz with her team, photo: private archive In addition, we can manipulate not only the surface properties but also the mechanical properties of the fibres. The key is to combine two characteristics: hydrophilicity, which attracts droplets, and hydrophobicity, which allows water to flow quickly off the surface, making room for new droplets. Only this combination yields high efficiency.

Based on this, we developed various material configurations with differing structures and properties – which resulted in a number of interesting publications and research findings.

Poland is one of the European countries, alongside Cyprus, Malta and the Czech Republic, experiencing chronic water scarcity. Was there no interest in developing this project?

One of the national parks in Poland contacted us with the idea of installing such a collector. However, our meshes are not yet large enough to operate efficiently under local conditions. We also do not have the equipment needed for large-scale production.

To what extent is it important in your work that research has a practical dimension?

I look for partners for various implementation projects. I believe that science must be useful. I realised this while completing my doctorate at Philips Research in Eindhoven. That was when I saw how a large corporation operates. Everything had its own rhythm and procedures; one had to log activities, submit reports, participate in meetings. Later, when I worked in London, in a small spin-out company, the experience was entirely different – one had to do all sorts of things, from conducting research and writing proposals to cleaning the laboratory and speaking with clients. Two completely different worlds. After these experiences, I decided that I wanted to pursue research in academia – I wanted to understand what I was doing. In a large company, what mattered were results and profit. In a small one, you had to handle everything at once.

I also noticed that problems with products often arise from neglecting fundamental research. It is basic research that is essential for addressing applied or industrial challenges. Without solid foundations, nothing works.

When I returned to Poland, I was delighted to discover that an institution such as the NCN exists – one that funds basic research specifically. Thanks to funding from the SONATA 8 call, in which we worked on biomedical scaffolds for bone regeneration, I was able to purchase my first electrospinning set-up and begin a new line of research at AGH. The experience gained and the contacts established during that project enabled me to apply for further funding and to develop the idea for an ERC grant.

Fibres of the future

You have also worked on burn dressings using electrospun nanofibres, and in your ERC project you are using electrospinning to create thermal-insulation materials that may be applied in the construction sector.

We understand the electrospinning process very well: we know how electric charges interact with the functional groups of polymers and how to control the parameters of the solutions and the atmosphere. This allows us to create fibres with diverse properties and applications – ranging from biomaterials to materials used for energy harvesting.

For example, by controlling the charges on the fibre surface, we can influence cell behaviour: fibres with a positive surface charge attract negatively charged cells, which supports their growth. Conversely, a difference in charge between material layers allows energy to be generated – this is referred to as triboelectricity. When a material bends and produces charges, the phenomenon is piezoelectricity. The same properties can therefore be used both for energy generation and for guiding biological processes.

Depending on the intended application, we select polymers that are biodegradable, biocompatible or mechanically robust. We also adjust the structure of the fibres, their porosity and the number of layers. In the ERC project, we are examining their thermal-insulation properties, including in combination with so-called phase change materials, which can store and release heat. High porosity makes these fibres excellent thermal insulators, while their large surface area enables both the storage of energy and its subsequent reuse.

The same principle applies in other applications – the large surface area facilitates the capture of water from fog or supports cell growth, as the structure resembles the extracellular matrix. In so-called smart textiles, these materials can breathe, generate energy from movement and function as pressure sensors.

My team includes biophysicists, materials engineers, chemists and bioengineers. Some are excellent at conducting cell studies, others specialise in material characterisation. Not everyone can perform electrospinning, but each person contributes something essential – without which the team could not function. We are now applying for more implementation-oriented projects, particularly those related to medical applications. I dream of establishing a laboratory in which we could produce medical products on a larger scale. But this is more a prospect for the next dozen or so years.

What would such a medical laboratory look like?

The medical field is an area in which new technologies can quickly find practical application and help address specific health challenges.

It would have to be a top-class facility, meeting full medical grade standards. Such a laboratory could prepare prototype medical products for companies – developing the complete formulation and then transferring it for implementation. It could also produce drug-delivery matrices, scaffolds for tissue engineering, or materials for research purposes. Centres operating at this level in electrospinning already exist in Europe, and it is my aspiration for a similar facility to be established in Poland, to demonstrate that it is equally feasible here.

I have been building the current laboratory step by step. Today, it is an integrated system of four units – from fibre fabrication, through material characterisation, to biological and application testing. We would like to continue developing this model and expand the laboratory so that we can move on to the stage of creating actual products, but we are already lacking space – both literally and figuratively. We constantly encounter constraints in terms of available room and infrastructure.

How long does it take to move from an idea to the point where you can demonstrate that a technology works?

Usually around two years. From producing and developing a material to publication or implementation, which is roughly the cycle.

Are products based on electrospun nanofibres already available on the market? Can they be purchased?

Urszula Stachewicz with her team, photo: private archiveUrszula Stachewicz with her team, photo: private archive There are already many products based on this technology; it is widely used, for example, in air filters. Globally, China is a leader in this area. A few years ago, at one of the conferences, a professor from China even appeared wearing a shirt made from electrospun fibres. In Europe, a major Czech company – Elmarco, founded as a spin-off of the University of Liberec – specialises in the industrial production of nanofibres. Elmarco is present at every electrospinning conference, showcases its solutions, collaborates with researchers and secures European grants. This is how visibility and standing in the sector are built.

Their example demonstrates how a simple idea can become a modern technology. They manufacture fibres that can be used in inserts for athletic shoes, in breathable textiles, in military materials and even in acoustic insulation. This shows that innovation does not need to be complicated to have economic significance. What is needed are companies capable of implementing it.

Have you ever considered starting such a company yourself?

Scientists think in terms of science, not business. What is needed here are people who know the market, can communicate with investors and understand how to build relationships and secure funding. I can develop the technology, but someone else has to recognise its potential and take care of the market side.

A different starting point

You spent many years working abroad. Researchers who return to Poland often struggle to readjust to working conditions here. Are the differences significant?

I was aware that after years of working abroad, I thought differently – I approached work, time management and team communication in a different way. None of this was taught here. In the companies where I had previously worked, training in topics such as time management, cultural awareness or dealing with e-mails was standard practice. Thanks to this, I learned how to plan and how to build effective teams, but in Poland I had to implement these practices on my own.

In the first months after receiving the ERC grant, I received e-mails with offers, because abroad a researcher with an ERC grant is viewed as an investment opportunity. At Maastricht University, I saw that a new hire is provided with a ready-to-use laboratory, equipment, and facilities – they can start working immediately. In Poland, however, there is no such thing as starting money; there are no laboratories with technical support available for a young professor to begin work right away. It took me ten years to build my laboratory. All the equipment we have was purchased through my research projects. I started with no equipment at all – I only had access to a scanning electron microscope. Now researchers from abroad come to us and say: "Your lab looks excellent.” But reaching this point required time, determination and a clear vision.

Another problem is the scale of bureaucracy. The number of documents, confirmations and photographs required was a cultural shock for me. In Poland, we often have to prove that we have not done something incorrectly. For example, when participating in a poster session, we must take photographs with the poster, because auditors may ask whether it was indeed presented. This lack of trust stems from our history – from a system in which people were taught for years to find ways around the rules – and it is changing only slowly.

What other changes would make your work easier?

We collaborate with various research groups, but we are also capable of producing excellent work on our own – often just as well, and sometimes even better. And that is precisely where the problem lies. When only an AGH affiliation appears next to your name, some editors are reluctant to pass our papers on. For many, our university is still not widely recognisable, and the old rule continues to apply: the name matters more than the quality. Editors receive thousands of manuscripts and often do not have the time to read each one carefully.

That is the reality. And yet we publish in leading journals such as Advanced Functional Materials. We want to demonstrate that high-level research can also be conducted in Poland.

The problem of insufficient international recognition of Polish universities was also raised by one of my previous interviewees, Professor Róża Szweda. She noted that editors of major journals should be invited to visit us.

That is an excellent idea. I collaborate with one of the institutes in Korea. When I visited them, a colleague said to me: “Our rector is currently in Germany meeting with editors from Wiley, because he is negotiating a special issue of Advanced Materials for our university.” Advanced Materials is one of the most important scientific journals in the world in the fields of materials science and nanotechnology. And their university treats the preparation of such a special issue as part of its development strategy.

And here? Do any rectors in Poland do anything similar? We do not even have a national agreement with Wiley for open-access publishing, although we do have agreements with Elsevier, Springer and ACS. This shows that in some countries it is well understood that high-level research and publishing are an investment in national development. In Asia this is obvious – science, technology and innovation are priorities.

In Poland, investments in science are often treated as a cost that is expected to pay off within a single term of office. But science does not work that way. What is needed is a long-term vision for the development of science – something that, unfortunately, we still lack in Poland.

At the NCN, together with researchers, we have been trying for months to convince policymakers that science is an investment.

Science is the foundation of technological and economic development. Countries that invest in research – in materials, energy technologies, new solutions for medicine – see the results in industry, innovation and quality of life after several or a dozen years. This does not happen from one year to the next – it is a long-term endeavour. But if the investment is made today, in a decade the difference will be enormous: in the country’s development, in the types of companies that emerge, and in the jobs created by new technologies.

I would allocate as much funding as possible to institutions such as the NCN, because everything begins with fundamental research. In reputable journals, one must always demonstrate the potential practical relevance of the results obtained. This encourages asking specific questions: What follows from this discovery? In what ways can it be used? How does it fit in with existing technologies? And then it becomes clear how advanced research can be when it stems from a simple, fundamental question.

In this year’s #NCNinterview series, we have already spoken with Zuzanna Świrad, a geomorphologist working, among other places, at the Polish Polar Station in Spitsbergen; Krzysztof Szade, a biochemist studying haematopoietic stem cells; Karolina Zielińska-Dąbkowska, an architect and lighting designer; Wojciech Małecki, a literary scholar; Zofia Boni, a social anthropologist; and Natasza Kosakowska-Berezecka, an intercultural psychologist and expert in equality and diversity. The series has been running since 2023, and all interviews are available on the website: #NCNinterview.

Survey on Fair Transition Towards Climate Neutrality

Fri, 11/07/2025 - 13:45
Kod CSS i JS

Experts interested in a fair transition towards climate neutrality can now share their perspective in a new European survey conducted by the DLR Project Management Agency.

A fair transition towards climate neutrality is one of the interest areas of the candidate European Partnership on Social Transformations and Resilience, which is expected to launch in 2027. The survey will contribute to shaping the candidate partnership’s Strategic Research and Innovation Agenda (SRIA), which is currently being developed.  

The survey is open until 3 December 2025 and takes approximately 10-20 minutes to complete, depending on how much information you choose to provide. All responses are anonymous and will be used solely for research purposes in the foresight process.

The survey is addressed to all interested parties, in particular representatives of the research community, governing authorities, NGO sector, public institutions and think tanks.

This is an opportunity to make a meaningful contribution and to share your insights and expertise.

Link to the survey

To find out more, please visit the STR Foresight Platform. If you have any questions, please contact the STR-Foresight Team at DLR-PT (STR-Foresight@dlr.de)