Materialism: A Materials Science Podcast

En podcast af Taylor Sparks and Andrew Falkowski

Kategorier:

94 Episoder

  1. Episode 72: Importance of Cross-Sector Collaboration

    Udgivet: 6.9.2023
  2. Episode 71: Automating Materials Discovery

    Udgivet: 28.8.2023
  3. Episode 70: Nickel Superalloys at General Electric

    Udgivet: 17.8.2023
  4. Episode 69: Manufacturing Monitoring at Gefran, Inc.

    Udgivet: 27.7.2023
  5. Episode 68: Thermal Spray Coatings at General Electric

    Udgivet: 21.6.2023
  6. Episode 67: Additive Manufacturing at General Electric

    Udgivet: 30.5.2023
  7. Episode 66: Ceramic Matrix Composites at General Electric

    Udgivet: 3.5.2023
  8. Episode 65: Fusion Reactor Materials

    Udgivet: 31.3.2023
  9. Episode 64: Bulletproof Materials

    Udgivet: 10.3.2023
  10. Episode 63: Spark Plasma Sintering at Cal Nano

    Udgivet: 6.2.2023
  11. Episode 62: Publishing in Scientific Journals

    Udgivet: 18.1.2023
  12. Episode 61: Catalysis at the Toyota Research Institute

    Udgivet: 28.11.2022
  13. Episode 60: Materials Modeling at General Electric

    Udgivet: 3.10.2022
  14. Episode 59: Photovoltaic Materials

    Udgivet: 29.8.2022
  15. Episode 58: Materials Informatics at General Electric

    Udgivet: 15.7.2022
  16. Bonus: Why is Materials Science Important?

    Udgivet: 13.6.2022
  17. Episode 57: Paper's Possibilities

    Udgivet: 26.5.2022
  18. Episode 56: Ceramic Dental Composites

    Udgivet: 3.5.2022
  19. Episode 55: Ceramics in Real Time

    Udgivet: 11.4.2022
  20. Episode 54: μ: Getting The Most Out Of Conferences

    Udgivet: 15.3.2022

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In this podcast, Taylor and Andrew investigate the past, present, and future of materials science and engineering. Topic areas ranging from cutting edge materials technology, the history of different materials, the commercialization of new materials, and exciting advances in processing and characterization are all covered in detail. Our episodes include things like the unlikely discovery of superglue or teflon, the fascinating backstories about modern biomaterials like dialysis filters, and updates on new technologies including wearable electronics, next generation batteries, and nanomaterials. In short, we hope to help listeners understand the critical role that materials have played in society and even glimpse into what the future may hold for new materials.

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