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Thermodynamics controls synthesis, corrosion, degradation, environmental transport, and catalysis processes and forms the fundamental underpinnings of reactivity, transformation, and stability in materials. The developments in energy conversion and storage (including renewables, nuclear energy, and batteries, to name a few active areas) have resulted in increasing need for improved and new materials, including better ways to characterize and study their fundamental properties. The investigation of the thermodynamics of many materials which undergo secondary phase formation under operating conditions raise issues of lifetime and compatibility critical for their application. Extreme conditions such as elevated temperatures and pressures, high radiation fields, and corrosive environments are encountered in nuclear energy and aeronautical and space applications. Such conditions parallel those encountered in the deep Earth and in planetary interiors. Fundamental thermodynamic measurements and computational predictions are required to understand and model the synthesis and use and eventual disposition of energy materials. The proposed symposium will bring together a group of experimental and computational materials scientists focused on predicting and measuring thermodynamic properties of traditional and new materials to be used in extreme environments.
Organizers include three of the founders the Thermodynamics Consortium. (THERMOCON) https://www.thermocon.org/. THERMOCON has almost 300 members from 6 continents, 20 countries, and more than 70 universities, government labs, institutes, and companies. THERMOCON is a diverse and energetic international community of researchers who collaborate to solve a variety of scientific and technological problems. In this symposium, we will also honor the recipient of the ACerS Navrotsky Award for Experimental Thermodynamics of Solids (https://ceramics.org/awards/Navrotsky-award). This symposium is co-sponsored by the ACerS Energy Materials & Systems Division and the ACerS Basic Science Division. |