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Nature Materials highlights CMM publication

Nature Materials has devoted its 'Material Witness' column to an article by Kurt Lejaeghere, prof. Stefaan Cottenier and prof. Veronique Van Speybroeck in Physical Review Letters. The text of Philip Ball points out the challenges for computational materials design and describes the advantages of the method developed at the CMM:

“One of the biggest problems for all approaches to materials design, whether experimental or computational, however, is that the range of options is so vast. Even screening ternary alloys presents a dizzying number of candidates, while today’s engineering alloys can have ten or more elemental components. The hope here is that computation can at least winnow the list of candidates, even though it’s often necessary to resort to experimental testing of the best ones.

But what does ‘best’ mean? Designing materials has always been a question of compromise, trading one desirable property against another (and cost must almost always be factored in somewhere). It is within this context that Lejaeghere et al. present a new methodology for selecting the best candidates from computational screening of materials (Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 075501; 2013). They point out that, although one can often use computation to identify a set of materials that outperforms the rest for a particular set of selection criteria, it is harder to rank these candidates in terms of their optimality. This is what the new procedure accomplishes.

It does so by defining a ‘win fraction’ for each pair of candidates, which quantifies the fraction of the trade-off in design criteria that favours one candidate over the other, summed over all the criteria. Then the minimum of the win fraction for each candidate with respect to all the others provides the required ranking factor: the larger this minimum, the better the trade-off in comparison to the rest of the set.

Lejaeghere et al. show that their approach produces intuitively sensible results when searching among tungsten, its binary alloys, and other pure elements, for economical materials with high mass density. Furthermore, they use the same candidate set to identify materials that optimize hardness (for which the computed bulk modulus stands proxy), thermal resistance (cohesive energy) and price. A third, more demanding case, seeks a material needed in nuclear reactors that balances ductility, temperature resistance and price.

Including more complex materials formulations, or examining properties that demand more than a scale-independent density-functional calculation of bulk properties, will doubtless introduce a steep gradient in computational cost. But at least for certain types of problem, the method can find the best of the bunch.”

Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: Nature Materials (Philip Ball, 'And the winner is...', Nature Mater. 12, 876 (2013)), copyright (2013).

ir. Lennart Joos at TEDxFullbright, Washington DC

PhD student Lennart Joos presented a talk at TEDxFulbright in Washington DC on April 5 2014. Lennart is currently residing at UC Berkely on a Fulbright Scholarship. Coincidentally, the theme of the TEDx event is dare to think, the slogan of his Alma Mater Ghent University. The event took place at US Chamber of Commerce, Washington DC.

Thesisstudent Sven Rogge winnaar Boston Consulting Group Strategy Cup

(27-02-2014) De Boston Consulting Group Strategy Cup werd dit jaar gewonnen door een team UGent-studenten. Proficiat aan Lena Kalingondo, Bram De Ruyck, Sven Rogge en Heleen Steuperaert.

Afgelopen week gaven meer dan 1.200 Belgische studenten het beste van zichzelf in de BCG Strategy Cup ten voordele van SOS Kinderdorpen. Onder hen ook 229 studenten van de UGent. En met succes, want 'team 42' met studente handelsingenieur Lena Kalingondo (2e master) en burgerlijk ingenieur studenten Bram De Ruyck (1e master), Sven Rogge (2e master) en Heleen Steuperaert (1e master) nam de hoofdprijs mee naar huis. Het winnende team stelde een uiterst sterk idee voor om donaties voor SOS Kinderdorpen mogelijk te maken via de supermarkten. Het initiatief blonk niet alleen uit door het hoge potentieel, maar ook, en vooral, door de pragmatische aanpak die door de studenten werd voorgesteld. Het voorgestelde concept zal verder worden uitgewerkt en de winnende studenten krijgen de mogelijkheid om de impact van hun werk te ervaren in een SOS Kinderdorp in Afrika.

Bron: http://www.ugent.be/nl/actueel/nieuws/bcg-strategy-cup.htm

Prof. Veronique Van Speybroeck nieuw lid van de Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten

(16-12-2013) Prof. Veronique Van Speybroeck is verkozen tot nieuw lid van de Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van België voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten, meer specifiek in de Klasse van de Natuurwetenschappen. Haar onderzoeksgroep is ingebed in het Centrum voor Moleculaire Modellering van de UGent.

(Bron: http://www.ugent.be/ea/nl/actueel/nieuws/prof-veronique-van-speybroeck-n...)

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Lecture Dr. P. Limacher

Dr. P. Limacher

The Ayers group, Department of Chemistry, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Accurate Bond Dissociation Curves at Mean-Field Computational Cost: Describing Strongly Correlated Systems with Nonorthogonal Geminals

September 17, 2013, at 14h00
Room Shingo, Technologiepark 903, Zwijnaarde


CMM LECTURES
Toon Verstraelen
Center for Molecular Modeling
Ghent University
Toon.Verstraelen@UGent.be
http://molmod.ugent.be

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Lecture Prof. Dr. Thomas Junkers

Prof. Dr. Thomas Junkers

Institute for Materials Research, Polymer Reaction Design Group, Universiteit Hasselt, Belgium

Precision polymers with controlled architecture and functionality

June 14, 2013, at 11h30
Ghent University, Technologiepark 903 (Auditorium Metallurgie), Zwijnaarde
Lecture in the framework of IAP P7/05


CMM LECTURES
Prof. Dr. ir. Veronique Van Speybroeck
Center for Molecular Modeling
Ghent University
veronique.vanspeybroeck@ugent.be
http://molmod.ugent.be

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Lennart Joos presents his PhD research on TEDx Ghent

Lennart Joos presented his PhD research on the TEDx Ghent auditions and was selected as a speaker for the TEDx meeting in June 22. In a six-minute talk, he demonstrated how a superacid has the potential to remove the hazardous NOx from exhaust gasses and hence prevent the formation of smog. Computer simulations provided a unique insight into the chemistry of this absorption process. In June, he will be speaking in front of 1000 knowledge junkies at TEDx Ghent!

This superacid can keep our air superclean

Lecture Prof. Dr. Guillaume Maurin

Prof. Dr. Guillaume Maurin

Head of the Group DAMP 'Dynamics & Adsorption in Materials with Porosity', Université Montpellier 2, France

Adsorption & Dynamics of diverse guest molecules in MOF materials: A computational exploration

April 19, 2013, at 11h00
Ghent University, Technologiepark 903 (Auditorium Industrieel Beheer), Zwijnaarde
Lecture in the framework of IAP P7/05


CMM LECTURES
Prof. Dr. ir. Veronique Van Speybroeck
Center for Molecular Modeling
Ghent University
veronique.vanspeybroeck@ugent.be
http://molmod.ugent.be

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