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This Friday's 11/16 Science at the Edge Seminar has been CANCELLED.

 

From: Brad Tobin <[log in to unmask]> 
Sent: Friday, November 9, 2018 9:44 AM
Subject: Science at the Edge Seminar: David Cahill on Friday, Nov 16 at
11:30am

 

Michigan State University

Science at the Edge

Engineering Seminar

 

November 16, 2018

11:30 a.m., Room 1400 Biomedical and Physical Sciences Building

Refreshments served at 11:15 a.m.

 

David G. Cahill

Materials Science and Engineering, Materials Research Laboratory

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 

Extremes of Heat Conduction:  Searching for the Perfect Thermal Insulator

Abstract

 

Thermal conductivity is a basic and familiar property of materials: silver
spoons conduct heat well and plastic does not.  In recent years, the
combined efforts of materials scientists, engineers, physicists, and
chemists have succeeded in pushing-back long-established limits in the
thermal conductivity of materials.  Our measurements of heat conduction in
novel materials are enabled by ultrafast optical pump-probe metrology tools,
e.g., time-domain thermoreflectance (TDTR). At the high end of the thermal
conductivity spectrum, theory and experiment recently revealed unexpectedly
high thermal conductivity in the binary compound BAs with a thermal
conductivity higher than any material except diamond and graphite.  At the
low end of the thermal conductivity spectrum, solids that combine order and
disorder in the random stacking of two-dimensional crystalline sheets,
so-called "disordered layered crystals" show a thermal conductivity only a
factor of 2 larger than air; similarly low thermal conductivity is exhibited
by functionalized C60 buckyballs assembled into dense thin films. Extremes
of high pressures (up to 60 GPa in diamond anvil cells) allow us to
continuous change the strength of molecular interactions in glassy polymers
and test models for heat conduction that originate with the 1911 theory of
Einstein.

 

Bio

 

David Cahill is the Willett Professor and Department Head of Materials
Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
He joined the faculty of the U. Illinois after earning his Ph.D. in
condensed matter physics from Cornell University, and working as a
postdoctoral research associate at the IBM Watson Research Center. His
research program focuses on developing a microscopic understanding of
thermal transport at the nanoscale; the discovery of materials with enhanced
thermal function; the interactions between phonons, electrons, photons, and
spin; and advancing fundamental understanding of interfaces between
materials and water. He received the 2018 Innovation in Materials
Characterization Award of the Materials Research Society (MRS); the 2015
Touloukian Award of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers; the Peter
Mark Memorial Award of the American Vacuum Society (AVS); and is a fellow of
the MRS, AVS, and APS (American Physical Society).

 

For further information, please contact Prof. Alexandra Zevalkink,
Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science at
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]

Persons with disabilities have the right to request and receive reasonable
accommodation. Please call the Department of Chemical Engineering and
Materials Science at 355-5135 at least one day prior to the seminar;
requests received after this date will be met when possible.

 

 

Brad

--

Brad Tobin

Chemical Engineering & Materials Science Department

College of Engineering

Michigan State University

428 S Shaw Ln Rm 2100

Engineering Building

East Lansing, MI 48824

Phone: 517-884-7937

Fax: 517-432-1105