Two Stony Brook University research initiatives led by Indian-origin scientists, were awarded seed funding through the SUNY Technology Accelerator Fund (TAF), which supports groundbreaking research opportunities and helps faculty inventors and scientists turn their research into market-ready technologies.
Gurtej Singh, research associate professor of surgery and Anurag Purwar, associate professor of mechanical engineering received the SUNY TAF funding which is awarded through a highly competitive process, according to a December 29, 2025, news release from Stony Brook University.
The selection weighs several factors, including the availability of intellectual property protection, marketability, commercial potential, feasibility, and breadth of impact.
“I applaud our SUNY researchers for their visionary work and for helping secure SUNY’s position as a national leader in cutting-edge research. The SUNY Technology Accelerator Fund helps advance research that will improve New Yorkers’ lives, health, and safety,” said SUNY Chancellor John B. King Jr., who announced the awards on December 17.

Gurtej Singh of Stony Brook’s Renaissance School of Medicine, was one of the seven SUNY TAF recipients for his research, DEVA – A Vascularized, Shelf-Stable Skin Substitute for Advanced Wound Care. Current skin substitutes often lack vascularization and long-term stability. Singh is advancing DEVA, a bio-printed, multilayered skin substitute with embedded vascular networks and antimicrobial properties, designed to jump-start the healing process and make chronic wounds that take months to heal a thing of the past.
This year’s SUNY TAF program was enhanced by a $100,000 investment from the Griffiss Institute that enables SUNY faculty, researchers, and students to engage with cutting-edge technology development initiatives driven by the U.S. Department of Defense, under the SUNY Mission TAF designation, the press release said. Griffiss Institute will also help further commercialize the solutions, ensure they contribute to national security, and bolster economic competitiveness.

Anurag Purwar of the Department of Mechanical Engineering in Stony Brook’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences was one of four SUNY Mission TAF awardees for his research, MotionGen – An AI Platform for Intelligent Mechanism Design in Robotics. Purwar is launching an enterprise version of MotionGen, a cloud-based AI platform that automates the robot mechanism design, reducing costs and improving quality through enhanced visualization and intelligent synthesis tools. MotionGen combines machine learning with domain-specific kinematics to rapidly generate, simulate, and optimize mechanism designs.
Since the launch of TAF in 2011, SUNY has invested more than $4.7 million in the program to successfully advance the commercial readiness of 91 innovations born at SUNY campuses. The program has catalyzed follow-on investment of an additional $41 million from development partners, including government agencies, industry licensees, and early-stage investors.



