Department of Materials Science and Engineering

Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


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DMSE News—February 2002

FACULTY HONORS

Professors Subra Suresh and Klavs Jensen, and DMSE alumnus Dr. Neil Paton (Ph.D., 1969) have been elected to membership in the National Academy of Engineering. The election announcement includes these citations:

Subra Suresh, R. P. Simmons Professor and Head, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. For development of mechanical behavior theory and experiment for advanced materials and applications, and for demonstrating fruitful new avenues for structural study.

Klavs F. Jensen, Lammot duPont Professor of Chemical Engineering and Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. For fundamental contributions to multi-scale chemical reaction engineering with important applications in microelectronic materials processing and microreactor technology.

Neil E. Paton, retired vice president, technology, Howmet Corp., Whitehall, Mich. For contributions to the development of advanced aluminum and high-temperature alloys for aerospace applications.

Each deserves our heartfelt congratulations for their achievements and the honor conferred by membership in NAE.

A complete listing of those newly elected to NAE is available.

 

Prof. Harry L Tuller was elected to serve as a councilor of the International Society of Solid State Ionics for 2002-2003.

Congratulations are sent to NIST Senior Fellow John Cahn for winning the 2002 Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science, a high honor given by the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Dr. Cahn is a former DMSE faculty member and a mentor and valued friend to many in the department. The citation for the award reads: "For profound contributions to the understanding of the thermodynamics and kinetics of phase transformations. His lifelong dedication to understanding materials has inspired generations of scientists and engineers to develop new materials based on his groundbreaking theories."

 

STUDENT HONORS

Garry Maskaly, DMSE Graduate Student, was awarded a Fellowship from the Fannie and John Hertz Foundation. Of 570 applicants, 21 Fellows were chosen (4 from MIT) to receive afive year, $200,000 Graduate Fellowship Award in the Applied Physical Sciences.

 

NEWS

MIT's Microphotonic Center has signed a research pact with Pirelli Labs. Several DMSE faculty members are affiliated with the Center. This agreement will lead to advanced research in the field of photonics. More information can be found in MIT's Tech Talk.

MIT Alum Daniel Cabrera attended January's State of the Union address as a guest of First Lady Laura Bush. Though he received his S.B. in Biology in 2001, in 1997 he was a student in 3.A04 Introduction to Physical Metallurgy, a freshman advising seminar instructed by Prof. Sam Allen and Toby Bashaw. Mr. Cabrera is now teaching science on a New Teacher Project fellowship at Jefferson Junior High School in Washington; Mrs. Bush started the New Teacher Program. More details can be found in Tech Talk.

Prof. Linn Hobbs has had a large media presence recently. He was profiled in the Boston Sunday Globe on January 27 in recognition of his having been awarded an honorary OBE (officer, Order of the British Empire) for his years of work on and dedication to the Marshall Scholarships. The article provides not only a biography of Prof. Hobbs (and includes a photograph of him with his medal) but also a good description of the field of materials science, suitable for the layperson.

Prof. Hobbs' popular IAP offering "In Vino Veritas" was included in Tech Talk's IAP Notebook this year. Over 1500 tasters has partaken in this class since 1982.

OBITUARIES

We have received the sad news that Dr. Thomas C. Wilder, Sc.D. 1962, suddenly passed away on Thursday, January 31, 2002, at his home in Cambridge, MA. Wilder was educated at Bowdoin before attending MIT. His interests were in the Thermodynamics of Alloys and the Extractive Metallurgy of Cu and Cu Alloys. Wilder was employed by Kennecott Copper Corporation's Ledgemont Laboratories until its closure, at which time he retired. He held 10 patents in the areas of chemical and extractive metallurgy and metals processing and was the Treasurer of the Boston TMS Chapter for over 25 years.
A memorial service will be held for Thomas C. Wilder on at 2p.m. Saturday, February 23, 2002, at the First Congregational Church in Winchester, MA
.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Scaling in Solid Mechanics: From Nano to Mega

Mechanics Seminar
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Tuesday, Feb. 19, Room 5-234, 4-5 p.m.
Zdenek P. Bazant
W.P. Murphy Professor of Civil Engineering and Materials Science, Northwestern University
In contrast to fluid mechanics, the deterministic problem of scaling in solid mechanics (i.e., the change of structural response caused by a change of size or scale) has long been neglected. One reason is that the classical theories, such as plasticity, elasticity with a strength limit, continuum damage mechanics and linear elastic fracture mechanics, possess no characteristics length. In that case the scaling is very simple--it is given by a power law. The problem becomes more interesting in various modern theories that involve a characteristic length. In that case, the scaling law is generally a transition from one power law to another. Determination of the general properties of response in the transitional `scale-bridging' range, typically the range of practical interest, is usually difficult, which is why brute-force computational approaches dominate. However, good approximations of general applicability may often be obtained by the technique of asymptotic matching--a smooth 'interpolation' between the opposite asymptotic scaling laws. Development of such asymptotic approximations began at Northwestern about a quarter century ago in connection with some special concrete structures, and recently this approach has been extended to many other materials.
The seminar first raises the question of asymptotic behavior of Gao, Huang, Nix and Hutchinson's dislocation-based theory of strain-gradient plasticity on the micrometer scale, which is currently of keen interest for micro- and nano-mechanics. Certain peculiar features of the nano-scale extension of the existing theory are identified and possible remedies pointed out. Subsequently, the size effects on the milimeter scale, exhibited by kink-band propagation in fiber-polymer composites and by fracture of polymeric foams, are examined. Pronounced deterministic size effects on the scales from decimeter to 'mega-meter', which are encountered, e.g., in the fracture of sea ice, failure of concrete structures, and triggering of snow avalanches or mountain slides, are discussed. A variety of scaling laws for these problems is reviewed, and the interaction of the energetic and probabilistic size effects is examined. In closing, it is emphasized that the size effect must have been a significant contributing factor in some famous structural catastrophes.
For additional information contact Professor Nicolas Hadjiconstantinou, Room 3-364, x2-2280. Refreshments will be served.

 

MICRORHEOLOGY IN TWO AND THREE DIMENSIONS

Dr. Alex Levine
University of California at Santa BarbaraAbstract: Microrheology is an important experimental probe of soft materials. By tracking the Brownian motion of submicron-sized tracer particles, one can probe over a wide range of frequencies the rheological properties of complex materials, including those that cannot be produced in bulk quantities. Because of these advantages, microrheology promises to open a new window on cellular biology by allowing one to noninvasively study how cells modify their material properties over their life-cycle, or in response to their environment. In addition, this experimental technique is currently being used by a number of groups to study the high--frequency dynamics of soft materials (such as semi-flexible polymer solutions) that are inaccessible by conventional rheology.
In this talk I will focus on two theoretical issues that arise in the interpretation of microrheological data. The first is that the complete response function of the probe particle must be understood to interpret its observed position fluctuations. As examples, I will examine the thermal fluctuations of a bead trapped in a polymer gel with viscous solvent as well as those of a bead attached to a viscoelastic membrane. The second issue is that, since the probe particle locally perturbs its environment, the observed fluctuations do not simply measure the properties of the original system. I show, through an interesting analogy to electrostatics, that the correlated fluctuations of two widely--separated particles can be used to determine the bulk, unperturbed properties of the material and to study the perturbation zone surrounding the probes. Finally, I conclude with a discussion of ongoing research on theoretical issues specifically relevant to the application of these techniques in living cells.Pizza Lunch @ 11:45 A.M.
Seminar @ 12:00 noon
Tuesday, February 19, 2002
MIT Room 12-132
For information, please contact Leonid Levitov at 253-6817 (levitov@mit.edu)

 

REAL-TIME MICROSCOPY OF SURFACE PHASE TRANSITION

SJames B. Hannon
IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Materials Science Seminar
1:00 P.M., Thursday, February 21st
McKay Lab 402, The David Turnbull Room
Harvard University, 9 Oxford Street

Short Courses On Computational Thermodynamics and Computational Kinetics at the Pennsylvania State University in May 2002

For more details, visit their web site. Registration fee waived for academic participants.

Please contact Rachel Kemper with news and announcements for this page. The DMSE community will be informed of changes and updates to this page through regular e-mail notifications. Please see recent award opportunities and job postings in relevant fields.

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