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Preview: 2015 Materials Research Society Fall Meeting & Exhibit

Hynes Convention Center and Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, Massachusetts : Meeting: November 29–December 4 : Exhibit: December 1–3 : www.mrs.org/fall2015

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 October 2015

Abstract

Type
News
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2015 

The Materials Research Society (MRS) will hold its 2015 Fall Meeting at the Hynes Convention Center and the Sheraton Boston Hotel in Boston, Mass., November 29–December 4, 2015. The Meeting will include a technical program, tutorials, a plenary session, an award ceremony, poster sessions, a career fair, and other special activities. MRS Advances (symposium proceedings) will be published and made available free online to MRS members.

MRS Meetings focus on the interdisciplinary nature of materials research worldwide. The program’s 55 symposia address leading-edge research and capture the extraordinary progress in materials science and technology, organized into the following clusters.

Advances in the design, synthesis, and processing of biomaterials and soft matter continue to expand the use of these materials in a wide variety of applications. The cluster on Biomaterials and Soft Materials captures this progress, with symposia aimed at stretchable and active polymers and composites for energy and medicine; engineering and application of bioinspired materials; multifunctionality in polymer-based materials; and materials science, technology, and devices for cancer modeling, diagnosis, and treatment.

In the cluster on Nanomaterials and Synthesis, symposia concerning the synthesis and function of a broad range of nanomaterials will be available. Topics of interest include micro- and nanoscale processing of materials for biomedical devices; nanocarbon materials—1D to 3D; plasmonic nanomaterials for energy conversion; and magnetic nanomaterials for biomedical and energy applications.

The cluster on Mechanical Behavior and Failure of Materials features shape-programmable materials; mechanical behavior at the nanoscale; microstructure evolution and mechanical properties in interface-dominated metallic materials; and materials under extreme environments.

Symposia concerning the utilization of a broad range of advanced materials in electronics and photonics devices and applications will be available, from molecularly ordered organic and polymer semiconductors to organic electronics. In this cluster on Electronics and Photonics, recent advances are covered in diamond electronics, sensors, and biotechnology; beyond graphene—2D materials and their applications; optical metamaterials; and materials and technology for nonvolatile memories.

Materials science advances driving improvements in energy conversion and storage are highlighted in the Energy and Sustainability (MRS/E-MRS Bilateral Energy Conference) cluster. Symposia will focus on advances in flexible devices for energy conversion and storage; thin-film and nanostructure solar-cell materials and devices for next-generation photovoltaics; nanomaterials-based solar energy conversion; and catalytic materials for energy.

Theory, Characterization, and Modeling is the focus of another cluster. Symposia will discuss topology in materials science; frontiers in scanning probe microscopy; advanced atomistic algorithms, theoretical studies and neutron scattering of liquids and glassy soft matter; and modeling and theory-driven design of soft materials.

Plenary session and awards

The Plenary Session will be held on Monday, November 30, at 6:30 pm, in the Sheraton Boston Hotel, second floor, Grand Ballroom. This year’s plenary speaker is Chad A. Mirkin, Director of the International Institute for Nanotechnology and the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry; professor of chemical and biological engineering; professor of biomedical engineering; professor of materials science and engineering; and professor of medicine at Northwestern University. Mirkin will discuss how nature utilizes nucleic acids to encode, transmit, and express genetic information in his talk entitled “Programmable Materials and the Nature of the DNA Bond.”

The Award Ceremony will convene on Wednesday, December 2, at 6:30 pm, in the Sheraton Grand Ballroom. The David Turnbull Lectureship Award, MRS Medal, Materials Theory Award, MRS Postdoctoral Awards, Graduate Student Gold and Silver Awards, and Von Hippel Award will be presented.

Named after the late David Turnbull of Harvard University, the David Turnbull Lectureship Award recognizes the career contribution of a scientist to fundamental understanding of the science of materials through experimental and/or theoretical research, as well as through writing and lecturing. Jacob Klein, of the Department of Materials and Interfaces at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel, is cited, “for discoveries which transformed our understanding of soft matter and interfaces, through sustained research, inspirational lecturing and academic leadership.”

The MRS Medal recognizes an exceptional achievement in materials research in the past 10 years, and will be awarded to Richard B. Kaner, Department of Chemistry, at the University of California–Los Angeles. He is cited “for the discovery of efficient methods to synthesize water dispersible conducting polymer nanofibers and their applications in sensors, actuators, molecular memory devices, catalysis, and the novel process of flash welding.”

The Materials Theory Award recognizes exceptional advances made by materials theory to the fundamental understanding of the structure and behavior of materials. This award, endowed by Toh-Ming Lu and Gwo-Ching Wang, is intended to honor both those who have pioneered the development of a new theoretical approach and those who have used existing approaches to provide significant new insight into materials behavior. This year’s recipient is Steven G. Louie, Department of Physics, University of California–Berkeley, “for his seminal contributions to the development of ab initio methods for and the elucidation of many-electron effects in electronic excitations and optical properties of solids and nanostructures.”

The MRS Postdoctoral Awards recognize postdoctoral scholars who show exceptional promise, which may include excellence in scientific research, leadership, advocacy, outreach, or teaching during their postdoctoral assignment.

The Fred Kavli Distinguished Lectureship in Nanoscience, which supports scientific research, honors scientific achievement, and promotes public understanding of scientists and their work, will be presented by Yi Cui from Stanford University.

The Kavli Early Career Award in Nanoscience recognizes significant novel contributions to materials science by a young researcher in the early stages of his/her career. This year's recipient is Ali Khademhosseini, Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology.

The award ceremony will be followed by the Von Hippel Award address. Named after Arthur R. von Hippel (1898–2003), the award recognizes brilliance and originality of intellect, combined with vision that transcends the boundaries of conventional scientific disciplines. Richard H. Friend, Optoelectronics Group, Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, will be recognized “for pioneering research on highly original materials phenomena and device concepts, enabled by polymeric semiconducting materials, and imprinting an indelible influence on contemporary materials science and the new field of plastic electronics.”

Special sessions and events

Symposium X talks provide Meeting attendees with an overview of leading-edge topics. Arumugam Manthiram of The University of Texas at Austin, USA, will present “Electrical Energy Storage: Materials Challenges and Prospects” on Monday, November 30; Zhenan Bao of Stanford University, USA, will discuss “Skin Inspired Organic Electronic Materials and Devices” on Tuesday, December 1; Joanna Aizenberg of Harvard University, USA, will address “Biologically Inspired Engineering: From Discovery to Technological Innovation” on Wednesday, December 2; and Christopher Ober of Cornell University, USA, will present “Fifty Years of Moore’s Law: Towards Fabrication at Molecular Dimensions” on Thursday, December 3.

Poster sessions, an integral feature of MRS meetings, will be held during the evenings. The meeting chairs will award prizes of up to $500 for the best posters during each session.

The Technology Innovation Forum will be held on Wednesday, December 2, at 9:00 am, in the Hynes Convention Center, Level 2, The Hub Stage. This forum features innovation and investor topics around materials for light emission and instrumentation using light for materials characterization. The keynote talk will feature a case study on LED lighting, including the trials, tribulations, successes, and fun involved in exploiting research to produce substantial cost savings and enable the worldwide use of LED lighting. The keynote speaker is Sir Colin Humphreys, University of Cambridge, whose talk addresses “Bridging the Gap between Science and a Real Product: A Case Study on LED Lighting.”

The Women in Materials Science and Engineering Breakfast will be held on Wednesday, December 2, at 7:00 am. Delia Milliron, from The University of Texas at Austin, will lead an interactive session about a materials-research-filled journey with a talk entitled “Off the Beaten Path: Path Making in the Stem Landscape.”

Government agency program managers will present information on funding opportunities in the materials science and technology research areas in Government Agency Presentations: Materials Research Support. The presentations will be held on Tuesday, December 1, and Thursday, December 3, 5:45–8:00 pm, in the Sheraton Boston Hotel. The tentative list of presenting agencies includes the National Science Foundation Division of Materials Research; US Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences; Electro-Optics Infrared Discovery and Invention, Office of Naval Research; and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

The 2015 MRS Fall Meeting Career Fair will be held in the Hynes Convention Center Exhibit Hall Tuesday through Thursday. The Career Fair will provide an opportunity for Meeting participants and top employers to discuss career opportunities and will feature recruiters and on-site interviews, career development sessions, and resume critiques and mock interviews. Students, postdocs, and seasoned professionals are all welcome.

2015 MRS Fall Meeting Registration Rates

All 2015 MRS Fall Meeting registrations include MRS membership through December 2016.

A Materials Hackathon will be held Monday morning through Tuesday at the 2015 MRS Fall Meeting. In 24 hours, MatHack participants will make 30-second pitches of ideas for new materials-related software, form teams around those ideas, bring the concepts to life with working code, and present the results to a panel of judges from across the materials field. Prizes will be awarded, and the results will be open-sourced and hosted for others to download.

A professional development workshop titled “Get Your Voice on the Table: Physical and Vocal Presence at the Meeting” will be held on Sunday, November 29, 1:00–4:00 pm, in the Sheraton Boston Hotel. The speaker is Nancy Houfek, an independent consultant for the Committee on the Advancement of Women Chemists, an organization dedicated to supporting and promoting the careers of women in the chemical sciences.

The popular Science as Art competition will be held again at this Meeting. The competition is open to all registered Meeting attendees, with entries to be on display in the Hynes Convention Center. Multiple first-place and second-place awards of $400 and $200, respectively, will be presented. Guidelines and deadlines for entry will be available on the 2015 MRS Fall Meeting website.

A number of other events will take place throughout the Meeting, including other professional development opportunities. To stay up to date with additional events and activities, access www.mrs.org/fall2015.

For more information

The deadline to preregister for the meeting is November 13, 2015, 5:00 pm (EST). International travelers are reminded to allow ample time to obtain a visa, if necessary. For additional details about the Meeting, contact MRS Member Services, Materials Research Society, 506 Keystone Drive, Warrendale, PA 15086-7573, USA; email , and tel. 724-779-3003. Details of various events and activities will be published in the 2015 MRS Fall Meeting Program & Exhibit Guide available on-site. The MRS website can be accessed for updated information on confirmed talks and details of special events, for more information on obtaining a visa, and for preregistration at www.mrs.org/fall2015.