Shuyang Xiao joined our group as a new PhD student. Welcome to UConn!!!
Shuyang will work on in-situ mechanical characterization of superplastic intermetallic compounds.
Jacob successfully finished his NSF-REU poster presentation on August 2, 2018.
His poster title is “A Nanoindentation study on Shock-Compressed Magnesium Single Crystals.”
Shocked Mg crystals were provided by US Army Research Laboratory.
Our whole group attended the ICSMA 18 at the Ohio State University on July 15~19, 2018.
We gave five oral presentations and one poster presentation.
Seok-Woo (PI) receives the funding from the Department of Energy – Basic Energy Science (DOE-BES)!
$367,566, 08/01/2018~07/31/2019
The title of project is “Mechanical properties of metal at the micrometer scale in different environment.” This project will focus on the ductile-to-brittle transition of body-centered-cubic materials at the micrometer scale. We believe that the size effect strongly influences the ductile-to-brittle transition. We will use in-situ cryogenic micromechanical testing, advanced transmission electron microscopy, and dislocation dynamics simulation to elucidate the fundamental dislocation processes at low temperatures (30~300K). The research outcome will be useful to develop a mechanically reliable structure at small length scales, which operates in cryogenic environments such as the deep space.
Seok-Woo (PI) receives the UConn Research Excellence Award ($50,000, 05/01/2018~04/30/2019) with his collaborator, Prof. Ying Li (co-PI) of UConn Mechanical Engineering. The title of research is “Metal-like strong, but foam-like compliant nanocomposites.” Seok-Woo’ group is primarily working on the composite synthesis and nanomechanics characterization. Prof. Li’s group will work on molecular dynamics simulation to understand the deformation mechanisms.
Keara’s paper entitled “A nanoindentation study of the plastic deformation and fracture mechanisms in single-crystalline CaFe2As2” is selected as a journal cover of July 2018 JOM (Journal of Materials). Congratulations!
*Keara Frawley was an undergraduate researcher in 2017 summer.
The paper link is here.
The cover page link is here.