2023 MRS Fall Meeting & Exhibit
Symposium CH02-Advances in In Situ TEM Characterization of Dynamic Processes in Materials
In situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques have emerged as primary tools for characterizing the dynamics of materials formation and transformations. The development of in situ TEM capabilities, such as heating, cooling, biasing, ion irradiation, and mechanical testing, has led to rapid advances in our understanding of crystallization, electrochemical processes, and structure-function relationships in organic, semiconductor, metals, and other systems. The symposium covers a broad range of topics including particle nucleation and growth, phase transformations, and interface dynamics with gases, liquids, and solids. This symposium aims to provide a platform for discussion to understand the physical and chemical processes governing the dynamic process of behavior under different external stimuli using in-situ TEM, as well as computer-aided image analysis and data processing, e.g. artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms.
Topics will include:
- Nucleation and crystal growth from solutions, melts, and vapors
- Chemical and electrochemical reactions
- Particle self-assembly processes
- Phase transformation and dynamic process using heating, cooling, ion irradiation, mechanical testing
- Advancement in specialized holders and electron microscopes and practical challenges for in-situ microscopy of phase (trans)formation and chemical reactions (including corrosion)
- Integration of big data-driven image analysis (machine learning and AI) with in-situ TEM for quantitative studies
- Interface-driven processes and interface dynamics in gases and liquids
- Mechanically, electrically, or magnetically driven processes
Invited Speakers:
- Qian Chen (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)
- Yi Cui (Stanford University, USA)
- James De Yoreo (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA)
- Arnaud Demortiere (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France)
- Xiaodong Han (Beijing University of Technology, China)
- Yu Han (King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia)
- Andy Minor (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA)
- Xiaoqing Pan (University of California, Irvine, USA)
- Jungwon Park (Seoul National University, Republic of Korea)
- Vesna Srot (Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research, Germany)
- Mitra Taheri (Johns Hopkins University, USA)
- Yao Yang (University of California, Berkeley, USA)
- Qian Yu (Zhejiang University, China)
- Haimei Zheng (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA)
Symposium Organizers
Dongsheng Li
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
USA
Madeline Dukes
Protochips
USA
Djamel Kaoumi
North Carolina State University
USA
Yujun (Terry) Xie
Shanghai Jiaotong University
China
Topics
electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS)
nucleation & growth
phase transformation
self-assembly
strain relationship
transmission electron microscopy (TEM)