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International Materials Institutes (IMI), DMR-0231320 A dvanced N eutron S cattering net W ork for E ducation and R esearch (ANSWER) P. K. Liaw and H. Choo, The University of Tennessee, USA
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International Materials Institutes (IMI), DMR-0231320 Advanced Neutron Scattering netWork for Education and Research (ANSWER) P. K. Liaw and H. Choo, The University of Tennessee, USA International Collaborators: Y. D. Wang (Visiting Scholar) and L. Zuo, Northeastern University, China R. L. Peng, Linköping University, Sweden Domestic Collaborators: D. W. Brown, Los Alamos National Lab; Y. Ren, Argonne National Lab Tracing Atomic and Microscopic Mechanisms of Shape-Memory Alloys Motivation • Shape-memory materials, which can change their dimension upon the application of external (magnetic or electric) fields, have found wide applications in medical, aerospace, and marine industries as actuators or sensors. • The atomic and microscopic mechanisms on the degradation of the shape-memory effect (SME) used under different conditions remain unclear. The synergistic international collaborations using the in-situ neutron and high-energy X-ray diffraction techniques reveal the role of stresses in the SME. Research Efforts • The quantitative characterization on the multi-scale microstructural information is necessary for the understanding of the interactions among the global and local textures, various stresses, and materials performance. Neutron-diffraction experiments help us (1) understand the principles of the variant selections under external fields and (2) trace the microscopic ‘memory’. Sonar Systems in MarineApplications Impact • The experiments and theories help us improve the reliability and performance of structural components and develop new functional materials. SME is used in Satellite Antenna
International Materials Institutes (IMI), DMR-0231320 Advanced Neutron Scattering netWork for Education and Research (ANSWER) P. K. Liaw and H. Choo, The University of Tennessee, USA Elena Garlea, Ph.D. Student, IMI-ANSWER, University of Tennessee Wanchuck Woo, Ph.D. Student, IMI-ANSWER, University of Tennessee Award:Elena received an “Outstanding Student Research” Award from the Neutron Scattering Society of America (NSSA) for her poster submission in June 2006. • Elena participated in the ASM Materials Camp as one of the mentors, where 23 high school students (9 female students) attended from the East Tennessee area. Awards and Activities • The Minerals, Metals, and Materials (TMS) Society, 2nd Place Outstanding Student Paper Award. • 2006 Jerome B. Cohen Student Award for his neutron research. • Wanchuck will participate in the IMI international exchange program to theoretically model friction-stir welding at Univ. of Manchester, UK, for about 5 weeks in Fall 2006. American Society for Materials (ASM): 2006 Materials Camp • The research poster “Debris Analyses of the Space Shuttle Columbia” created by a team of high-school students won the 1st Place Award (3rd overall) at the 2006 Microscopy and Microanalysis Conference. High-school students at the Materials Camp Michael Benson, Ph.D. Student, IMI-ANSWER, University of Tennessee IMI International Exchange Program • Mike will be working with Prof. Walter Reimers at Technical Univ. Berlin. Prof. Reimers is a world-renowned expert in diffraction-profile analyses for the understanding of deformation behavior of advanced structural materials. Mike will stay in Germany from 9/12 to 10/16/2006. DESY Synchrotron Site, Hamburg, Germany