When:
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM CT
Where:
Online
Webcast Link
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Contact:
Meelee Ahn Park
(847) 491-5586
Group: McCormick-Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics (ESAM)
Category: Lectures & Meetings, Academic
Title: Systematic manipulation of disorder for extraordinary functionality in materials
Speaker: Dr Varda Hagh, Postdoctoral Scholar, University of Chicago
Abstract: Much of materials science deals with ordered crystalline or polycrystalline materials that are designed and delicately fabricated to have specific desired properties. However, disordered materials, such as glasses or granular media, have an untapped potential: they can exist in a multitude of metastable states that are distinguished by their microstructure. While the vast majority of these states have similar (boring!) bulk properties, there are a few rare cases, in the midst of this sea of mediocrity, that have spectacular behavior. The challenge, of course, is to direct the material to such targeted useful states that would never be discovered by chance alone. Inspired by biology, we meet this challenge by introducing material training protocols that allow evolution toward those desired states. In these protocols, the possible modes of relaxation are augmented by introducing extra transient degrees of freedom, such as particle radii, that allow an
easier pathway to the target. Once that desired state is reached, the additional degrees of freedom are removed. In this talk, I will explore how different transient degrees of freedom lead to different behaviors such as enhanced stability. The framework I present provides a systematic approach to create novel materials and metamaterials by using disorder as a core feature of the design.
**Please note, this event will be held online via Zoom at the following link: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/99715177433
-----
To subscribe to the Applied Mathematics Colloquia List send a message to seminar-join@esam.northwestern.edu