MSE Seminar Series: Phase transformations of nanoscale systems using in situ TEM

Friday, April 19, 2019
1:00 p.m.
2110 Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Bldg, UMD College Park
Sherri Tatum
statum12@umd.edu

Speaker: Judy J. ChaAssistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science, Yale Uninversity

Title: Phase transformations of nanoscale systems using in situ TEM

Abstract: 

Many nanoscale systems rely on phase transformations for switching their functionalities in response to stimuli. Thus, investigation of such phase transformations and subsequent correlation to changes in materials properties are critical. Cha uses in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) as a tool to study directly how phase transformations occur, deviate, and be controlled at the nanoscale under either thermal or electrical stimuli. 

Dr. Cha will discuss two phase transformation examples: IBM’s confined phase change memory (PCM) devices with a metal surfactant layer, which showed a record endurance of 2x1012 programming cycles and metallic glass nanostructures that are used to test the limits of classical nucleation theories at the nanoscale. In both cases, atomic scale in situ TEM investigations reveal detailed and unexpected phenomena, which can guide us to build better models and theories. If time allows, she will briefly cover superconducting behaviors of topological superconductor nanowires (indium-doped tin telluride nanowires) and the importance of sample quality in dictating exotic quantum phases.

 

Audience: Campus 

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