Dr. Liu Named TMS Fellow

Dr. Liu has been named a fellow of The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS), the society's highest honor. TMS fellows are recognized as leading authorities and outstanding contributors to the practice of metallurgy, materials science, and technology, and for outstanding service to society.

Read the full story at Penn State News here

IBM Supports Our Computational Thermodynamics Workshop

This summer, IBM Academic Initiative has supported our computational thermodynamics workshop (see pycalphad&ESPEI) by providing us with a powerful cloud-based infrastructure. Compared to our previous, offline, in-person delivery, we were able to effortlessly accommodate many more participants and eliminate problems with software installation on personal computers.

See the full story of this Penn State & IBM collaboration: Modeling software for Materials 4.0

Congratulations to Cassie (PhD'17)

Congratulations to Cassie Frueh (PhD in 2017) on two major achievements! First and foremost, she just had her second daughter Sylvie on the 6th of September. Secondly, she was also recently promoted to manager of the computational analysts at Almatis as well as the manager of their innovation process.

Congratulations to Chelsey on her ASM Bronze Medal Award

Congratulations to our alumnus Chelsey Z. Hargather (PhD 2012), currently an assistant professor at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. Chelsey will receive a Bronze Medal Award from AMS “for technical contributions to materials science and engineering through dissemination of her scientific work and graduating students; and for developing herself and her students professionally through her service to ASM.”

Read more about her and other awardees here.

Congratulations to Laura on her Child

Congratulations to Laura Jean Lucca Weidman (BS, 2010) and Nick for their second child, Nicholas James Weidman, Jr., born on Sunday, 6/6, 2021! Wish their family of four all the best!

Congratulations to Greta for Docent Position at KTH

Congratulations to Dr. Greta Lindwall (Postdoc 2013-2015) for becoming a Docent in Materials Design for Additive Manufacturing at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden.

Chelsey's NSF CAREER Award

Congratulations to our alumna Chelsey Hargather (Ph.D. 2012) on receiving the prestigious NSF CAREER award that will fund her proposal on An Efficient First-Principles Method for Calculating Deformation Properties, Diffusivity, and Secondary Creep-Rate Behavior in BCC High-Entropy Alloys. Chelsey is currently an Assistant Professor at New Mexico Tech. Details about her proposal can be found here.

Bi-Cheng's NSF CAREER Award

Congratulations to our alumnus Bi-Cheng (Ph.D. 2015) on receiving the prestigious NSF CAREER award that will fund his proposal on A Novel Computational Thermodynamics Framework with Intrinsic Chemical Short-Range Order. Bi-Cheng is currently a tenure-track Assistant Professor at the University of Virginia. Details about his proposal can be found here.

Congratulations to Frank McGrogan and 2 others...

Our alumnus, Frank McGrogan (BS 2013) received his PhD from MIT (2018) and has been working at SageGlass on the electrochromic smart glass. He is happily married and has a 7-month old daughter. Congratulations on life success!

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$1.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy’s ARPA-E

Team of PennState researchers, led by Dr. Liu, received a $1.2 million ARPA-E grant as part of $16 million in funding recently awarded for 17 projects through ARPA-E’s Ultrahigh Temperature Impervious Materials Advancing Turbine Efficiency (ULTIMATE) program. ULTIMATE teams will develop ultrahigh temperature materials for gas turbine use in the aviation and power generation industries.

Our team will generate alloy property data using high-throughput computational and machine learning models to design ultrahigh-temperature refractory alloys employing a neural network inverse design approach, where the needed functionality and property are specified first, followed by identification of the materials that exhibit the desired properties.

The full story in PennState News can be accessed here.

 
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