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Ceramic and Materials Science and Engineering 150
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  Graduate School-New Brunswick 2005-2007 Programs, Faculty, and Courses Ceramic and Materials Science and Engineering 150 Graduate Courses  

Graduate Courses

16:150:501(F) Advanced Powder Processing I (3) Examination and comparison of classical and high-technology, ceramic-processing systems using chemical thermodynamics and kinetics; understanding the approaches for chemically synthesizing ceramic material, coprecipitation, sol-gel processing, hydrothermal synthesis, plasma, and CVD. Riman. Prerequisite: 16:150:531.
16:150:502(F) Advanced Powder Processing II (3) Microstructure development: powder; consolidation behavior; and sintering process, including thermodynamics compared with kinetics, and solid state compared with liquid phase or reactive densification. Danforth
16:150:503(F) Theory of Solid-State Materials (3) Basic principles of classical and quantum mechanics, as well as the experimental basis for introduction of quantum postulates. Application of these concepts to various physical phenomena to develop an understanding of solid-state material behavior. Khachaturyan
16:150:504(F) Structural Defects in Solids (3) Atomistic aspects of defects in solids, including point defects, dislocations, and grain boundaries; nature of partial dislocations; grain boundary dislocation interactions; grain boundary migration and segregation phenomena; nature of interfaces. Cosandey. Prerequisite: 16:150:551 or equivalent.
16:150:505(F) Advanced Glass I (3) Advanced topics in glass science and engineering. Major emphasis on the structure and transport properties of oxide and selected nonoxide glasses. Detailed discussion of glass structure, structural modeling, and the relationship between structure and properties. Wenzel
16:150:506(S) Advanced Glass II (3) Correlation of the fundamental optical properties of glasses to their structure and bonding. Intrinsic absorption and scattering, color, luminescence, photochromism, laser action, and nonlinear effects in glasses. Sigel
16:150:508Advanced Ceramic-Metal Systems (3) Physical and chemical principles of interactions between metals and ceramic materials. Solid, liquid, and interfacial energies. The effect of microstructure in cermet bodies and its relationship to the exhibited properties. Practical systems such as oxide base cermets, carbides, and composite materials. Greenhut
16:150:509(F) Advanced Electronic Ceramics (3) Electrical, optical, and magnetic properties of ceramic materials based on their electronic structure, defect chemistry, and transport processes. Safari. Prerequisite: 14:154:421.
16:150:510(S) Physical Properties of Crystals (3) Physical properties of crystals in tensor notation. What tensors are and how they are used. Common mathematical basis of tensor properties; thermodynamic relations among them. Safari
16:150:511Thermal Analysis of Ceramic Materials (3) Description of equipment used for differential thermal analysis (DTA), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA). Calibration techniques. Interpretation of results. Relationships among sample thermal properties, particle size, sample size, crucible materials, heating rates, and atmospheres. McCauley. Course offered in alternate years.
16:150:512(S) Advanced Ceramic Microscopy (3) Use of optical microscopy for the study of ceramic microstructures. Advanced techniques, including image analysis for studying both polished sections and thin sections. Techniques in photomicroscopy with application to a particular problem of interest to each student. McCauley. Prerequisite: 14:150:407.
16:150:513(F) Mechanical Behavior of Ceramic Materials I (3) Mechanical behavior and properties of oxide and nonoxide ceramics, emphasizing fracture, microstructure, and environment. Differences in plastic behavior of ceramics related to creep, wear resistance, and hardness. Cannon
16:150:514(S) Mechanical Behavior of Ceramic Materials II (3) In-depth usage of advanced topics concerned with mechanical properties of ceramic materials, including thin films, fibers, and stress effects on properties. Matthewson. Prerequisite: 16:150:513.
16:150:515(F) Properties of Optical Ceramics (3) Waveguide propagation starting with Maxwell's equations, slab and cylindrical waveguides, active waveguides, fiber laser materials and configurations, infrared fiber waveguides, optical power delivery, fiber optic sensors. Harrington. Prerequisites: 16:150:505, 506.
16:150:516(S) Molecular Behavior of Glasses (3) Atomic structure and properties of noncrystalline solids. Molecular mechanisms of macroscopic behavior. Topics include nature of the glass transition, structure/composition relations in oxide glasses, diffusion, and glass surfaces and interfaces. Prerequisites: Glass engineering or equivalent and 16: 150:505, 506.
16:150:517(F) Advanced Refractories (3) Role of the phase equilibria and microstructure in the corrosion of refractories. Stability and behavior in selected environments, including ferrous and nonferrous metals, glass, and advanced energy systems. McCauley
16:150:520(S) X-Ray and Spectrographic Methods in Ceramics (3) Principles, operation, and application: X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence, analytical electron microscopy, microprobe analysis, high-temperature X-ray image and backscatter electron analysis, qualitative diffraction, and quantitative chemical and phase analysis. Greenhut, Mayo
16:150:521(S) X-Ray and Spectroscopic Methods Laboratory (1) Qualitative and quantitative chemical and phase analysis by X-ray fluorescence and diffraction methods, automated diffractometry, microanalysis and image analysis, strain and particle size determination, and sample preparation techniques, including random sampling. Greenhut, Mayo. Corequisite: 16:150:520.
16:150:522(F) Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Microanalysis (3) Principles, operation, and application of scanning electron microscopy and X-ray microanalysis: electron optics; instrumental and signal resolution; qualitative and quantitative chemical microanalysis; image processing; signal and metallic samples for ceramic, organic, and metallic samples. Greenhut
16:150:523(F) Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Microanalysis Laboratory (1) Operation of the scanning electron microscope: secondary, backscatter, and specimen current images; elemental distribution by line scans and mapping and quantation by X-ray fluorescence; electronic-image enhancement; stereoscopy; preparation of inorganic and organic samples. Greenhut. Corequisite: 16:150:522.
16:150:524(F) Advanced Ceramic Characterization (3) Instrumental techniques for characterization of ceramics and the study of processing and properties, including absorption and emission spectroscopy, FTIR and Raman spectroscopy, secondary ion mass spectrometry, XPS scanning Auger microscopy, neutron scattering. Cosandey. Prerequisites: 14:150:309, 359.
16:150:525(F) Properties of Ceramic Surfaces (3) Surface structure of ceramic materials, absorption, surface diffusion, thin films. Garofalini
16:150:526(S) Crystal Chemistry of Ceramic Materials (3) Relationship of structure to composition, temperature, and pressure. Importance of ionic radii, charge, and polarizability in determining structure. Study of families of compounds, compound formation, and phase transitions. McCauley
16:150:527(F) Thermodynamics of Ceramic Systems (3) Emphasis on special thermodynamic considerations for ceramics: chemical thermodynamics; solution thermodynamics; and thermodynamics related to phase diagrams, surfaces, and point defects. Matthewson
16:150:528(F) Modern Electrochemistry and Electrochemical Materials Science (3) Electrochemistry and electrochemical materials science of advanced batteries, fuel cells, and sensors for industrial, environmental, and biomedical applications. Electrochemical methods and techniques. Xu
16:150:529(S) Introduction to the Fundamentals of Applied Colloid and Surface Chemistry (3) Colloid or surface chemistry in solvent-based systems; characterization of colloid systems using direct and indirect methods. Thermodynamic treatments of surfaces, adsorption, and charged interfaces. Structural models incorporating neutral and charged adsorbates; various means of stabilizing and destabilizing colloids. Riman
16:150:532(S) Kinetics of Materials Systems (3) Diffusion in solids. Solutions to Fick's first and second laws under important boundary conditions. Ionic diffusion. Diffusion applied to sintering. Solid-state reaction kinetics. Nucleation, crystal growth, and precipitation. Klein. Prerequisite: Differential equations.
16:150:551(F) Physical Metallurgy (3) Crystal structure of metals and nature of bonding; free energy and phase diagrams; defect structure and relationship to mechanical properties; phase transformations and hardening mechanisms; recovery and recrystallization processes. Tsakalakos
16:150:552(S) Phase Transformations in Metal and Alloys (3) Thermodynamics and phase diagrams. Solid solutions. Ordered phases. Coherent, semicoherent, and incoherent precipitates. Diffusion-controlled and interface-controlled growth. Nucleation and growth theories. Overall transformation kinetics. Precipitation. Diffusionless transformations. Prerequisite: 16:150:551 or equivalent.
16:150:553(F) Mechanical Behavior of Metals (3) Response of metals to applied forces from both macroscopic and microscopic points of view. Crystal defect structures as they relate to plastic flow and the onset of fracture. Case studies of metal deformation and fracture, including fatigue, creep, environmentally assisted fracture, and wear. Mayo. Prerequisite: 16:150:551.
16:150:561(F) Materials Science Laboratory (3) Use of instrumentation in the modern analysis laboratory, such as X-ray diffractometers, creep machines, torsional pendulum. Computer-controlled data acquisition, noise reduction, and curve fitting methods. Mayo. Prerequisite: Previous computer experience.
16:150:563(F) Elementary X-Ray Diffraction (4) Principles of atomic arrangements; X-ray diffraction by real crystals and elucidation of structure-sensitive properties; identification of unknown substances, phase analysis, X-ray topographic methods, and special methods to characterize defect structures of materials.
16:150:564(S) Advanced Diffraction Analysis (3) Application of Fourier transform and convolution methods to diffraction of amorphous and crystalline materials; elucidation of lattice defects and correlation to properties of materials, dynamical theory, and application in materials science. Prerequisite: 16:150:563.
16:150:566(S) Electron Microscopy (3) Nature of the electron microscope; techniques of specimen preparation; theory of electron diffraction; diffraction patterns; application to crystal structure; crystal morphology and defects in various engineering materials. Cosandey
16:150:567(S) Electron Microscopy Laboratory (1) Techniques of electron microscopy and application to structure and defect structure of materials.
16:150:568(F) Advanced Electron Microscopy (3) Principles and aspects of dynamical theory. Weak-beam analysis. High-resolution imaging. Convergent-beam diffraction. Scanning transmission and analytical microscopy. Description and application of specialized microscopy techniques to materials problems, including metals, ceramics, and polymers. Cosandey. Prerequisites: 16:150:566, 567, or equivalent.
16:150:569(F) Quantitative Metallography (3) Theory and practice of stereological aspects of quantitative analysis of microstructures observed in alloy, ceramic, polymeric, histological, and other materials. Determination of three- dimensional properties of microstructures by means of measurements of two-dimensional sections, transmission, or scanning electron micrographs. Tsakalakos
16:150:571,572 Introduction to Packaging Engineering I,II (3,3) Materials science, engineering, design, development and testing, packaging machinery, package production, distribution, marketing and resource utilization.
16:150:575(F) Packaging-Regulatory Aspects (3) State and federal regulation of packaging and labeling for consumer and environmental protection. Regulations for engineers and scientists to design and fabricate legal containers. Forecasting and aiding in development of future trends in regulatory action. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572.
16:150:576(S) Packaging Machinery (3) Interrelationship between machinery and materials; package- production lines; principles of machine design and selection and economics of choice of alternatives. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572.
16:150:577,578 Materials and Design in Packaging (3,3) Package design problems from point of view of chemical, physical, and engineering behavior of entire system. Emphasis on properties of packaging materials and relation of those properties to structure and performance. Idol. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572.
16:150:581,582Seminar in Packaging (1,2) Idol. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572.
16:150:583,584 Materials and Package Evaluation Laboratory (3,3) Principles and practices used in the characterization and evaluation of the engineering properties of packaging materials and packages. Gas and vapor permeation of materials and packages; physical properties of materials and packages; package dynamics. Lec. 1 hr., lab. 6 hrs. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572.
16:150:587,588Special Problems in Packaging (BA,BA) Idol. Prerequisites: 16:150:571,572, and permission of instructor.
16:150:595Structural Transformations in Solids I (3) Crystallography of phase transformations. Stability of homogeneous solutions. Static concentration wave theory. Decomposition in alloys. Spinodal decomposition. Elastic coherency strain. Morphology of single coherent inclusions. Applications: precipitation, ceramics, polymer blends. Tsakalakos. Prerequisites: 16:150:551, 552.
16:150:596Advanced Topics in Materials (3) Diffusional transformations in crystalline materials. Ordering. Symmetry and long-range order. Symmetry and thermodynamics. Nonstoichiometry and ordering in ceramic systems. Decomposition in ceramic and metal systems. Diffusional kinetics. Elementary atomic processes in diffusion. Diffusionless (displacive) transformations. Crystallography of crystal lattice rearrangement. Crystal lattice coherency. Habit plane and orientation relationships. Orientation relations. Shape Memory Effect. Ferroelectric and ferroelastic transitions. Striction. Transformation-induced strain and strain-accommodating structures. Applications to ferroelectric and ferroelastic systems and to metal alloys. Khachaturyan. Pre- or corequisites: 16:150:551, 552 or equivalent.
16:150:597,598(F,S) Case Studies in Manufacturing Ceramics (3,3) Students work in groups to research problems and present reports. Students solve an actual industrial manufacturing problem in collaboration with a local industrial company. Niesz
16:150:601,602Ceramics and Materials Seminar (1,1) Current areas of research studied and discussed. Cannon
16:150:603,604(F,S) Special Problems in Ceramics and Materials Science (BA,BA)
16:150:701,702Research in Ceramics and Materials (BA,BA)
 
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