Materialism: A Materials Science Podcast
En podcast av Taylor Sparks and Andrew Falkowski
108 Avsnitt
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Episode 106: Photoluminescent Materials
Publicerades: 2025-06-12 -
Episode 105: Cooling Paints
Publicerades: 2025-05-22 -
Episode 104: The Winding Path to Materials Discovery
Publicerades: 2025-05-08 -
Episode 103: MatterGen
Publicerades: 2025-04-24 -
Episode 102: Integrating Materials and Manufacturing Innovation
Publicerades: 2025-03-21 -
Episode 101: All About Biomatter
Publicerades: 2025-02-26 -
Episode 100: Materials for Bikes
Publicerades: 2025-02-04 -
Episode 99: Bulk Metallic Glasses
Publicerades: 2025-01-10 -
Episode 98: Accelerating Catalyst Research with Meta
Publicerades: 2024-12-11 -
Episode 97: Titanium
Publicerades: 2024-11-18 -
Episode 96: Spark Ablation with VSParticle
Publicerades: 2024-10-31 -
Episode 95: You Don't Know Anything About Steel
Publicerades: 2024-10-09 -
Episode 94: An Introduction to Quantum Materials
Publicerades: 2024-09-26 -
Episode 93: An Introduction to Pyrometallurgy
Publicerades: 2024-09-10 -
Episode 92: The Quest for Pure Uranium
Publicerades: 2024-08-22 -
Episode 91: High Entropy Alloys
Publicerades: 2024-07-24 -
Episode 90: The Big Dig Incident
Publicerades: 2024-06-25 -
Episode 89: Special Applications of Microscopy Technologies
Publicerades: 2024-06-10 -
Episode 88: Accelerating Materials Discovery with Microsoft
Publicerades: 2024-05-08 -
Episode 87: Stories of a Materials Salesman
Publicerades: 2024-04-25
In this podcast, Taylor and Andrew investigate the past, present, and future of materials science and engineering. Topic areas ranging from cutting edge materials technology, the history of different materials, the commercialization of new materials, and exciting advances in processing and characterization are all covered in detail. Our episodes include things like the unlikely discovery of superglue or teflon, the fascinating backstories about modern biomaterials like dialysis filters, and updates on new technologies including wearable electronics, next generation batteries, and nanomaterials. In short, we hope to help listeners understand the critical role that materials have played in society and even glimpse into what the future may hold for new materials.
