SCIENTISTS (Egami and Davies) RECEIVE $1.4 MILLION
TO STUDY MATERIALS THAT CAN INTERCHANGE SOUND WAVES AND ELECTRICAL
SIGNALS
PHILADELPHIA - The Office of Naval Research has awarded $1.4
million to a consortium of universities and research laboratories,
including three materials scientists from the University of
Pennsylvania, to study materials that can convert sound waves
into electrical signals and vice versa.
Takeshi Egami, professor and chair of Materials Science and
Engineering at Penn, is co-principal investigator on the grant.
Also involved in the project are Peter K. Davies, professor
of Materials Science and Engineering at Penn;[CHA1] Andrew
M. Rappe, associate professor of chemistry at Penn;[CHA2]
and researchers from the Carnegie Institution of Washington,
Rutgers University, the University of Arkansas and the U.S.
Naval Research Laboratory.
The grant, which could be extended for as long as five years
pending congressional approval, will establish the Center
for Piezoelectrics by Design, to be based at the College of
William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va.
"CPD will be a decentralized 'virtual lab,' operated
via a shared computer, and Penn will play a key role,"
Egami said. CPD will conduct research into the theoretical
prediction and experimental realization of new members of
a class of materials that can convert sound waves into electrical
signals and then back to sound.
Applications of piezoelectric materials include medical ultrasound
devices and naval sonar. Advances in piezoelectric materials
could dramatically improve the portability and performance
of these and other systems based on transducers, devices that
interconvert electrical and mechanical energy.
The search for better piezoelectric materials has generally
relied on costly and time-consuming trial-and-error [CHA3]synthesis
and testing of candidate materials. CPD will take a different
approach, using computational modeling to develop new types
of candidate materials and to screen them for desired properties
before taking them into the laboratory.
"All known high-performance piezoelectrics are structurally
and chemically complex materials," Egami said. "The
ability to reliably predict the properties of such materials
by computational modeling is the result of steady advances
in computational materials physics over a decade of Office
of Naval Research[CHA4]-supported theoretical and experimental
research on ferroelectric and piezoelectric oxides and related
materials. The design of piezoelectrics requires an unprecedented
degree of cooperation among the participating scientists."
CPD has been established to facilitate these efforts, with
a special cluster of computers, specialized software support
and a regular schedule of team meetings.
Based at William and Mary[CHA5], CPD will be housed at the
Applied Research Center adjacent to the Thomas Jefferson National
Accelerator Facility in Newport News, Va. The Applied Research
Center is a collaborative effort involving the City of Newport
News, the Commonwealth of Virginia, the U.S. Department of
Energy and four state-supported universities.
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