Golfer247 - The latest news and products from the world of golf
Main Menu | News By Date | News By Supplier | News By Category | About Us
 

NEW CARNEGIE MELLON COMPUTATIONAL METHOD COULD SPEED METALLIC GLASS DESIGN, TESTING
30 August 2004 - Carnegie Mellon Universtity

Want a tennis racket that propels balls faster than a race car or a sturdy ship hull that never rusts? Finding the recipes for such remarkable materials – called amorphous metals – should be easier using a new computational approach developed by Carnegie Mellon University physicist Michael Widom. Described in an upcoming issue of Phys. Rev. B (September 1, 2004), this method already has been used to virtually generate recipes for more than 1,700 structures, many of which have never before been analyzed. The novel approach should prove valuable in guiding future bench testing and sparing countless hours of laboratory trial and error to generate amorphous metals.

Alloys for everyday materials like stainless steel are made by combining a metal with other elements. The resulting metals crystallize into lattices in which atoms line up in orderly arrangements. Defects in these crystals inevitably weaken materials made from them, leading to fractures and corrosion.

Amorphous metals, otherwise known as metallic glass, lack these defects because they are disordered materials essentially frozen in place. Consequently, they display remarkable corrosion resistance, strength and elasticity – the 'spring-like' property coveted by tennis and golf champions.

Despite their promise, only small quantities of metallic glass have been generated to date because heated alloys require rapid cooling to freeze a glass into place. Quick, uniform cooling of a large quantity of material is difficult, given that elements like to combine with one another in energetically favorable combinations, resulting in impurities that crystallize in an amorphous glass as it cools.

Using the new computational method, developed by Widom, scientists now can virtually predict what structures will crystallize out of an amorphous metal as it cools and how 'spicing' a mixture with new elements prevents the emergence of these impurities.

Widom and his colleagues, including Yang Wang from the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, Marek Mihalkovic from the Slovakian Academy of Sciences and Don Nicholson from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, used powerful computing to systematically mix different amounts of elements in iron alloys and identify potential metallic glass compositions.

'Our method allows us to calculate energies associated with the formation of stable crystalline structures within these alloys,' said Widom, a professor of physics. These energies reflect the drive different element compositions have to crystallize out of an amorphous glass. 'We can identify an unstable mixture to quench into a glass, see what nearby structures are likely to crystallize out, and thwart their formation,' he added.

Given this information, Widom then can virtually add new elements to an alloy recipe and see how they 'confuse' the tendency of crystals to form.

'Metallic glass is not the most natural state to form as an alloy cools. To make it easy to form glass you want to rearrange things so that the crystalline alternatives are less likely to result,' said Widom. In work to date, Widom already has generated several potential glass alloy mixtures and has shown that 'spicing' an iron alloy mixture with a small amount of the large element Yttrium facilitates metallic glass production. Independent laboratory research at University of Virginia and at Oak Ridge National Laboratory confirms this finding.

'Ultimately, we would like to identify candidate mixtures that could be cooled in bulk to form novel metallic glasses,' he said.

The new approach is sound, according to Widom, who has used it to propose structures for previously unsolved compounds and also has shown that it generates findings that match experimentally produced results, where they are available.

While this approach is highly promising to study iron-based metallic glasses that could be used in structures such as ship hulls, it also could be used to evaluate metallic glasses made from other alloys. These include aluminum-based mixtures that could yield lightweight, stress-resistant metallic glasses for airplanes.

This research is supported by a three-year, $5.5 million grant from DARPA shared with others at University of Virginia, Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center. All the data generated to date are available online at http://alloy.phys.cmu.edu

http://www.cmu.edu

About: Carnegie Mellon Universtity
Since its founding in 1900 by industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, Carnegie Mellon University has been a pragmatic institution, adapting rapidly to change. In fewer than 100 years it has changed its name three times--each transition marking a milestone in the institution's 20th century evolution.

Whether it was Carnegie Technical Schools, as it was in its first 12 years, Carnegie Institute of Technology, its name from 1912 to 1967, or Carnegie Mellon University, three primary purposes formed its foundation. Throughout this century, Carnegie Mellon has focused on delivering distinctive and first-quality education, fostering research, creativity and discovery, and using the new knowledge created on campus to serve our larger society.

When Arthur A. Hamerschlag served as the school's first president, Carnegie Technical Schools' 12 professors and six administrators sought to educate the sons and daughters of Pittsburgh workers for employment in the region's growing industries.

These educators served the vision of Carnegie by organizing into four faculties: the School of Science and Technology, the School of Fine and Applied Arts, the School of Apprentices and Journeymen, and the Margaret Morrison Carnegie School for Women.

In its earliest years, the institution served primarily part-time and undergraduate students. The faculty, many of whom did not have doctor's degrees, focused on teaching and curriculum development.

But research efforts began as early as 1916 when the Division of Applied Psychology of the Carnegie Institute of Technology developed rating scales for job placement. This rating system was used to classify two million men for placement in the armed forces during World War I. Research bureaus were organized in coal mining, nuclear physics, applied chemistry and metallurgy.

And by granting the nation's first undergraduate degree in drama in 1917, the institution began a tradition of leadership in the arts that spanned the century.

Through research and the education of its students during the administration of President Thomas S. Baker in the 1920s and '30s, the institution began its strong tradition of transferring knowledge and skills to industry and government.

Building on this firm foundation, the administration of President Robert E. Doherty introduced a new approach to education that would be used as a model by similar institutions around the nation. The Carnegie Plan for Professional Education, initiated in 1939-40, required engineering and science students to take a quarter of their courses in a new Humanistic and Social Relations sequence. In addition, its curriculum focused on teaching students problem-solving techniques, a hallmark of the Carnegie Mellon educational experience today.

While the Doherty administration has been credited with this educational innovation, it also oversaw growth in the institution's research capability. Between 1936 and 1950, the number of graduate students grew from 36 to more than 260. The research budget ballooned from $156,000 to $1 million.

In the 1950s, the newly formed Graduate School of Industrial Administration, endowed by William Larimer Mellon, emerged as one of the three or four best business schools in the nation. (In 2004 the school was renamed the David A. Tepper School of Business after benefactor and alumnus David Tepper (MBA '82).) Today, the school is recognized as a pioneer in the field of management science and one of the top business schools in the world.

The Warner administration oversaw the institution's burgeoning research enterprise. This period of research growth was aided by the work of the institution's Computation Center, founded in 1956 to provide computing services to the campus. A major grant from benefactor Richard K. Mellon in 1965 aided the establishment of a Computer Science Department, a department which would be the genesis of Carnegie Mellon's worldwide reputation in computer science.

By the end of the Warner administration and the start of the administration of President H. Guyford Stever in 1966, Carnegie Tech had most elements of a university. Its merger in 1967 with the Mellon Institute created Carnegie Mellon University and brought a $60 million endowment, extensive research facilities and renowned research personnel to the institution.

Five years later, President Richard M. Cyert (1972-90) began a tenure that was characterized by unparalleled growth and development. The university's research budget soared from about $12 million annually in the early 1970s to more than $110 million in the late 1980s. The work of researchers in new fields such as robotics and software engineering helped the university build on its reputation for innovative ideas and pragmatic solutions to the problems of industry and society. Carnegie Mellon began to be recognized as a truly national research university able to attract students from across the nation and around the world.

The Cyert administration stressed strategic planning and comparative advantage, pursuing opportunities in areas in which Carnegie Mellon could outdistance its competitors.

An archetypal example of this approach was the introduction of the university's "Andrew" computing network in the mid-1980s. This pioneering network, which linked all computers and workstations on campus, set the standard for educational computing and firmly established the university as a leader in the uses of technology in education and research.

Education and teaching also benefited in this period with the establishment of a University Teaching Center to improve faculty teaching and the renovation of many of the university's classrooms.

Cognizant of the university's heritage, President Robert Mehrabian (1990-97) invited alumni from the era of the institution's first president, Arthur A. Hamerschlag, to attend his inauguration in 1990. President Mehrabian emphasized Carnegie Mellon's traditional strengths in education, research and service to society while focusing on initiatives for leadership in the 21st century.

With the appointment of the university's first Vice Provost for Education, President Mehrabian placed renewed emphasis early in his administration on the quality of undergraduate education. He also moved aggressively to complete the most ambitious campus building plan since the Warner era. The University Center, which opened in August 1996, and the Purnell Center for the Arts, to be completed by the fall of 1999, are keys to enhancing the quality of life on campus, another priority of the Mehrabian administration.

Confronted by shrinking governmental support of university research, President Mehrabian diversified the university's research agenda. He stressed the need to build strong relationships with the business world, matching industry's needs with the university's areas of research strength. He also put new emphasis on productivity, improvement of administrative services and strategic management of university resources.

President Mehrabian established strong, new partnerships with the greater Pittsburgh community. He led a community-wide economic development initiative, spurred collaboration with primary and secondary schools, and worked closely with local community groups.

On April 15, 1997, Jared L. Cohon, former dean of Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, was elected by the university's Board of Trustees to succeed President Mehrabian, who resigned to spend more time with his family in California.

"Since I was chosen, since this wonderful event has occurred, it has made me reflect on why you are choosing me," President Cohon said in his first speech to the university community. "And I've said to people since this was announced that the more I think about it, the more I realize how well I think this institution and I fit together. We'll see if that's true. I think it is.

"When I was at Johns Hopkins we used to always hold up Carnegie Mellon as an example," Cohon said. "So, for many years I've ... been jealous of what has been accomplished here across departmental lines. I celebrate that. I think it is so valuable in every aspect of this university and it will position Carnegie Mellon to be even better...."

During Cohon's presidency, Carnegie Mellon has continued its trajectory of innovation and growth. Today, President Cohon is leading implementation of a comprehensive strategic plan that aims to leverage the university's existing strengths to benefit society in the areas of biotechnology and the life sciences, information and security technology, environmental science and practices, the fine arts and humanities.

The university is also committed to broadening and enhancing undergraduate education to allow students to explore various disciplines while maintaining a core focus in their primary area of study. Realizing that today's graduates must understand international issues, Carnegie Mellon is committed to providing a global education for its students and is striving to expand its international offerings and to increase its presence on a global scale. Increasing diversity, in all aspects, and fostering the economic development of southwestern Pennsylvania, are also top priorities.

Over the years Carnegie Mellon's leaders have reflected Andrew Carnegie's original dedication and commitment to this institution. In his 1900 letter to the mayor of Pittsburgh establishing Carnegie Technical Schools, Andrew Carnegie wrote, "My heart is in the work." These words have been echoed by students, faculty and administrators throughout this century and they live on the Carnegie Mellon campus today.


More News:
  • For August 2004
  • From Carnegie Mellon Universtity
  • For University

 

©2008 New Materials International