INFN -Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
 

n.5 | August 2025

Detail of the accelerator at LABEC, the INFN Laboratory of nuclear techniques for the Environment and Cultural Heritage. ©INFN

Detail of the accelerator at LABEC, the INFN Laboratory of nuclear techniques for the Environment and Cultural Heritage. ©INFN

From the lab to the market: the path of
applied research for innovation

There are ideas capable of surpassing their initial purpose, ideas that provide answers even to questions different from those that first inspired them. Sometimes they move across neighbouring or distant fields of research, sometimes they cross the boundary between research and industry, transferring expertise, techniques and technologies directly from the laboratory to society. Physics has always been a powerful incubator of innovation, having developed pioneering methodologies that have found applications in biomedicine, cultural heritage, environmental and climate studies, energy, supercomputing, and space technologies. Over its 74-year history, INFN has played a leading role in transferring technologies from fundamental research to society, and this success has been made possible thanks to large-scale research projects and the ability to establish strong collaborations with public and private partners across the country. In Germany, an effective synergy in this field has been cultivated by the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, an organisation based on a public-private funding system which, on the one hand, safeguards research independence and ensures the functioning of infrastructures, and, on the other, guarantees that research is effectively market-oriented. In this way, since 1949, the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft has acted as a true facilitator between industrial partners, the research community and the public sector to transfer scientific results to the industry. Its model is unique within the European research landscape and so robust that it has established the organisation as one of the world’s leading players in applied research. We interviewed Ilaria Marcolini, Head of Marketing, Communication, and Public Relations at Fraunhofer Italia, to hear how this experience has been transposed into the Italian innovation ecosystem, particularly in the Autonomous Province of Bolzano, where it is based.

 
Ilaria Marcolini

Interview with

 

Ilaria Marcolini

Interview with Ilaria Marcolini, Head of Marketing, Communications and Public Relations at Fraunhofer Italia

Ilaria Marcolini coordinates marketing, communication and PR activities for Fraunhofer Italia, contributing to the promotion of applied research through public initiatives, strategic collaborations and outreach projects.

What is Fraunhofer Italia?

Fraunhofer Italia is the first and currently the only Italian branch of the wider Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, one of the world’s leading organisations in the field of applied research. We were established in late 2009 in Bolzano, thanks to the vision and initiative of Assoimprenditori Alto Adige, which recognised the strong need for an applied research institute to support local companies. Not only are we part of the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft network, with which we maintain continuous exchanges, but we are also part of NOI Techpark, the technology park of Bolzano, a real hub for innovation. We moved into NOI in 2017, alongside the University of Bolzano, two other research centres, and numerous South Tyrolean start-ups and companies, contributing to a fast-growing ecosystem that is redefining the industrial profile of the region and turning it into a modern, sustainable district. Within this context, ARENA, our application centre, is the space where we work, test and validate original solutions with the aim of transforming research into real-world applications for industry.

 
Read the interview ⭢
 

News

 
The synchrotron at CNAO, the National Centre for Oncological Hadrontherapy, in Pavia

TECH TRANSFER

Physics and Technology

The cavern that will host the Hyper-Kamiokande experiment in Gifu Prefecture, Japan. ©University of Tokyo

INFRASTRUCTURE

Japan: excavation of the gigantic cavern for the Hyper-K experiment completed

Pier Andrea Mandò at LABEC, the INFN Laboratory of nuclear techniques for the Environment and Cultural Heritage

AWARDS

Pier Andrea Mandò awarded the Enrico Fermi Prize 2025 by the Italian Physical Society

Decay of the sigma-plus baryon ©LHCb

RESEARCH

The rarest baryon decay ever observed confirms the Standard Model

Positioning of one of the new ARCA detection units ©KM3NeT

INFRASTRUCTURE

ARCA-51 offshore campaign: 10,000 new eyes for KM3NeT

The Galileo Galilei Medal 2025 award ceremony

AWARDS

In Florence, at Villa Galileo, Pierre Sikivie and Leonard Susskind receive the Galileo Galilei Medal 2025

 

Events of
AUGUST

until 21 September

MAC Lula, Lula (NU)

Exhibition: Einstein Telescope. Listening to the Universe

until 29 September

Venice

Exhibition: Painted Gold. El Greco and Art between Crete and Venice

until May 2026

Giovanni Poleni Museum, Padua

Exhibition: Models. Knowledge in 3 dimensions

September 11-14

Miramare Terrace, Camogli (GE)

Camogli Communication Festival 2025

 
 
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Project and contents Martina Bologna, Cecilia Collà Ruvolo, Eleonora Cossi,
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