Highlights
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
Summer Enrichment Program for High School Students, PSSI
Andrew R. McGhie and Mark Licurse, University of Pennsylvania
The LRSM has organized a free, four week summer program for local high school students interested in materials science and engineering since 1993. Typically 24-28 students, usually juniors but occasionally well qualified sophomores, are accepted. Students are drawn from schools in the Delaware Valley within easy commuting distance of the LRSM. The program consists of lectures on materials, a computer lab, experimental labs, and field trips to both industrial and Penn facilities.
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
Panel Discussion on Entrepreneurship, CTT and LRSM
Mark Licurse , Andrew R. McGhie and Pam Beatrice (CTT), University of Pennsylvania
This year, we collaborated with Penn’s Center for Technology Transfer (CTT) on a discussion panel "How to Start a Materials-based Company." CTT is in charge of transferring inventions and innovative knowledge to outside organizations for the benefit of society. The panel, geared mainly towards graduate students, focused on starting a materials science based company. Three CEOs from the Delaware Valley discussed their startup experience, and two experts, who assist new companies, provided information on available resources for entrepreneurs.
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
In Situ Repair of Nanocrystal Devices
Chris B. Murray and Cherie R. Kagan (IRG4), University of Pennsylvania
Semiconductor nanocrystals are sensitive to air and solvents, which hinders wet-chemical processing under ambient conditions.
This problem has limited the scaling of nanocrystal device dimensions and large-scale device integration achievable by conventional processing.
We demonstrated a simple, in-situ recovery route using indium metal as a chemical agent which upon thermal activation is triggered to diffuse and repair the damage introduced by chemical and environmental exposure that degrade the electronic properties of semiconductor NC thin films and their devices.
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
Phonons & Soft Spots in Two-dimensional Glasses and Crystals
Andrea Liu and Arjun G. Yodh (IRG3) , University of Pennsylvania
The mechanical failure of amorphous systems is not well understood, but recent work by Liu and co-workers suggests that low-frequency vibrational modes are concentrated in localized regions, or “soft spots,” that are prone to rearrange. Yodh and Liu experimentally studied the nature of soft spots in crystalline and amorphous packings of colloidal spheres. In crystals [1], they found soft spots to be concentrated on topological defects such as grain boundaries and dislocations that are well known to serve as flow defects in crystals.
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
Glycodendrimers
Virgil Percec, Paul Heiney and Daniel A. Hammer (IRG2), University of Pennsylvania
Dendrimers are highly branched molecules. Amphiphilic glycodendrimers have been synthesized for the first time. These macro-molecules have tunable carbohydrate head groups and hydrophobic tails. The precise architecture of the dendrimers facilitates assembly of precise structures, including vesicles (glycodendrimersomes). These novel vesicles display biological activity, including fusion and coalescence in response to lectins.
Mar 6, 2014
UPENN Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers
The Directed Dance of the Defects
Randall Kamien, Kate Stebe and Shu Yang (IRG1), University of Pennsylvania
The term “defect” suggests something to
be avoided. However, our team has
developed an extensive toolkit to control the locations, shapes, and detailed
geometry of so-called topological defects in liquid crystals, the same sorts of
materials used in the $100bn/year display industry. Our goal is to harness these defects to use
them as cues for further directed- and self-assembly, as lenses and optical
elements, and as building blocks for hierarchical materials.
Jan 27, 2014
Cornell Center for Materials Research (2017)
Atomic Break Dancing in the World’s Thinnest Glass
P. Y. Huang, S. Kurasch, J. S. Alden, A. Shekhawat, A. A. Alemi, P. L. McEuen, J. P. Sethna, U. Kaiser, D. A. Muller, Science 342, 224-227 (2013)
Electron microscopy reveals the fundamental steps of bending
An international team of Cornell researchers and collaborators was recently entered into the Guinness Book of World Records for fabricating the world’s thinnest pane of glass — only two atoms thick!
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