RESEARCH INTERACTION TEAM (RIT):
Current Challenges in Materials Science:
Aspects of Interface Motion
FALL 2009
Department of Mathematics
Department of Physics
Institute for Physical Science and Technology (IPST)
University of Maryland, College Park
LECTURES:
Wednesdays, 4:30pm-5:30pm
(unless noted otherwise);
Room: MATH 1308
Organizers:
Theodore L. Einstein (einstein@umd.edu),
Dionisios Margetis (dio@math.umd.edu)
Scope & Research Focus:
The complex properties of material surfaces and interfaces
have been the subject
of theoretical and experimental scrutiny
for many years.
Surfaces mediate mass and charge transport mechanisms in various
applications
ranging from the design and fabrication of nanoscale optoelectronic devices
to the pressing issues of energy conversion and storage.
This RIT focuses on recent progress and emerging problems in the modeling
and analysis
of surface phenomena across
length and time scales.
Mathematical, physical and chemical aspects
will be discussed.
Particular emphasis will be placed on tools of kinetic theory
that permeate
interface evolution and fluctuation.
TOPICS: The (tentative) topics to be addressed are expected to fall into three
general categories:
A. PDE modeling and analysis:
Prediction of surface morphology from given initial or final data
("inverse problem");
averaging (homogenization) of composite surfaces;
free-boundary problems with microstructure.
B. Stochastic aspects of interface motion:
Random data, notions of noise and related descriptions;
kinetic theory of surfaces;
`mean-field' approximations; analogies
with other physical systems (e.g., non-uniform liquids);
germane problems of long-range interactions between line defects (steps)
C. Emerging issues of energy conversion and storage:
modeling of electronic transport; kinetic formalism(s).
CREDIT:
Students can take 1-3 units of credit by attending
this RIT, and
studying and presenting a paper on an acceptable topic agreed on with one
of the organizers,
or discussing original research.
For details, contact one of the Organizers (above).
Schedule for Fall 2009:
(talks will be posted on a week-by-week basis)
September 9, 4:30-5:30pm
Organizational meeting -- Introduction of topics
by Dio Margetis
September 16, 4:30-5:30pm
Terrace width narrowing on surfaces during growth
by Ted Einstein (Physics, UMD)
September 23, 4:30-5:30pm
Some analytic results on kinetic theory of step fluctuations
by Dio Margetis (Math, IPST & CSCAMM, UMD)
September 30,
NO TALK
October 7,
Determining equilibrium correlation functions from
truncations of exact BBGKY hierarchy equations
by John D. Weeks (Chemistry & IPST, UMD)
October 14,
The evolution of
free boundaries: Analysis and
homogenization.
by Antoine Mellet (Math, UMD)
October 21,
CANCELLED
October 28,
Kinetic Monte Carlo simulation studies of coarsening in
mesoporous fcc crystals: topological and morphological evolution,
diffusion
pathways, and void formation
by Jonah D. Erlebacher (Mat. Sci. & Eng., Johns Hopkins Univ.)
November 4,
One-dimensional stochastic model of epitaxial growth
by Rongrong Wang, (Math/AMSC, UMD)
November 11,
Generalized Thermodynamics of Surfaces with Application to Small Scale
Systems
by Robert C. Cammarata, (Mat. Sci. & Eng., Johns Hopkins Univ.)
November 18,
CANCELLED
by Mark Stiles (NIST)
November 25,
OPEN--Thxgiving Eve
December 2,
On diffuse interface models
by Konstantina Trivisa (Math & IPST, UMD)
December 9,
Mean-field theories for fluctuations of surface line defects:
Fokker-Planck equations and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations
by Paul Patrone (Physics, UMD)