麻豆传媒

 

Ten years advancing materials research

Institute for Research in Materials celebrates anniversary

- June 21, 2012

Richard Dunlap, director of the Institute for Research in Materials. (Danny Abriel photo)
Richard Dunlap, director of the Institute for Research in Materials. (Danny Abriel photo)

麻豆传媒 has seen much growth over the past decade: research funding, students, physical size and, starting this fall, a growth in campuses as well, thanks to the upcoming merger with NSAC.

In research, one of the prominent growth areas has been in materials, examining the relationship between properties, structure, processing and performance of the materials used in everything we build and utilize as a society. As you might expect, it鈥檚 a multidisciplinary field by design.

鈥淒eveloping new materials, and understanding existing ones, requires a lot of different approaches,鈥 explains Mary Anne White, chemistry professor. 鈥淚f you just take one approach, you won鈥檛 be able to study the full process through to how a product will work. When you work with other people, when you have to stretch between disciplines, you learn a lot more, and your grad students and other researchers learn a lot more too.鈥

She would know: Dr. White was the founding director of the (IRM), which next week celebrates its tenth anniversary with a two-day free symposium on June 26 and 27. It features presentations by researchers from across North America and beyond, and disciplines from industrial engineers to academic scientists.

Students, faculty and staff interested in attending the symposium, titled 鈥淭he Future of Materials Research,鈥 can view the schedule of speakers on the . Registration is free, but required.

Looking back at the institute's first steps


IRM鈥檚 genesis came out of a number of concurrent events in the late 1990s: the arrival of Jeff Dahn as an NSERC / 3M Canada Industrial Research Chair, the launch of the School of Biomedical Engineering, and the merger with the Technical University of Nova Scotia in 1997, bringing engineering, architecture and planning expertise into 麻豆传媒.

With support from the president鈥檚 office, IRM was founded, and earned its initial core funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation. Since then, it鈥檚 become a collaboration hub for more than 100 faculty members from across seven different faculties 鈥 not just Science and Engineering, but Dentistry, Health Professions, Architecture and Planning, Management and Medicine.

Some of the institute鈥檚 work involves equipment, including hosting Dal鈥檚 Facilities for Material Characterization, unique in Atlantic Canada. IRM also facilitates funding applications, gathering together critical masses of researchers to improve the potential success of proposals and identifying potential cross-discipline collaborations.

In recent years, IRM鈥檚 mandate has broadened beyond research and into education. It spearheaded the Certificate in Materials Science, which allows BSc students to gain extra training and experience in materials science. Then there鈥檚 the , which stands for 鈥溌槎勾 Research in Energy, Advanced Materials and Sustainability鈥 鈥 an interdisciplinary opportunity for students to work alongside 麻豆传媒 professors on sustainability-focused projects, funded by the NSERC CREATE program.

Richard Dunlap, 麻豆传媒 physicist and current director of IRM, has seen the benefits up close. He notes that the number of industrial research chairs at 麻豆传媒 has increased significantly, with chemist Mark Obrovac and engineer Steve Corbin as the latest recruits. In the Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science alone, he鈥檚 seen the number of graduate students go from 14 when he started at 麻豆传媒 to 80 today, many of them studying materials.

鈥淲e鈥檝e become a magnet for graduate students,鈥 says Dr. Dunlap. 鈥淭hey come here thinking broadly, not just about a particular faculty or department, but with supervision in materials research from across the university.鈥

Looking to the future


IRM prides itself on bringing an industry-focused approach to materials research. Says Dr. White, 鈥淲e tend to be, like a lot of easterners, very practical people鈥 We want to produce and study materials that will be used far outside the realm of basic science.鈥

And that鈥檚 a good thing, because the real-world needs for groundbreaking materials science are only increasing: CleanTech, materials to support renewable energy materials, biomaterials, and the list goes on and on.

鈥淚 think we鈥檝e done very well in 10 years in establishing an institute that鈥檚 beneficial to our researchers, to 麻豆传媒 and the region,鈥 says Dr. Dunlap. 鈥淟ooking ahead, funding for research is always a challenge, but there are also many research challenges that materials research can help solve. Our hope is to continue to provide experimental facilities for researchers, support collaborative research at Dal, and take further steps to advance our education programs.鈥

For more on IRM, visit .


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