Monday, May 20, 2013 - 4:00pm - 4:50pm
KEC 1001

Michael McHenry
Professor
Materials Science and Engineering Department
Carnegie Mellon University

Abstract:
Recent USDOE workshops highlight the need for advanced soft magnetic materials 
leveraged in novel designs of power electronic components and systems for power 
conditioning and grid integration. Similarly soft magnetic materials figure 
prominently in applications in electric vehicles and high torque motors. 
Dramatic weight and size reductions are possible in such applications. 
Nanocomposites also hold potential for applications in active magneocaloric 
cooling of such devices. Bulk and thin film soft magnet sensors can contribute 
to the search for oil and critical materials. Opportunities for state of the 
art soft magnetic materials to impact such applications have been helped by 
investment by USDOD Programs and other world wide efforts to advance these 
materials for applications in military electric vehicle technologies.

This talk will focus on the framework for developing high frequency (f) magnetic materials 
for grid integration of renewable energy sources bridging the gap between materials 
development, component design, and system analysis. Examples from recent efforts to develop 
magnetic technology for lightweight, solid-state, medium voltage (>13 kV)energy 
conversion for MW-scale power applications will be illustrated. The potential for materials 
in other energy applications (motors, cooling, sensors, RF metal joining, etc.) will also 
be discussed. The scientific framework for nanocomposite magnetic materials that make high 
frequency components possible will be presented in terms of the materials paradigm of 
synthesis -> structure -> properties -> performance. In particular, novel 
processing and the control of phase transformations and ultimately nanostructures has 
relied on the ability to probe structures on a nanoscale. Examples of nanostructural 
control of soft magnetic properties wi!
ll be illustrated.

Speaker Biography: Michael E. McHenry is Professor of Materials Science and Eng. (MSE), with an appointment in Physics at Carnegie Mellon. He graduated with a B.S. in Metallurgical Eng. and Materials Science from Case Western Reserve in 1980. From 1980 to 1983 he was employed as Process Engineer at the U.S. Steel Lorain Works. In 1988 he earned a Ph.D in Materials Science and Eng. from MIT. He was a Director's Funded Post-doctoral Fellow at Los Alamos Lab from 1988 to 1989. He has expertise in the area of nanocrystalline magnetic materials including soft magnetic nanocomposites, faceted ferrite nanoparticles and materials for power conversion, biomedical, energy and data storage applications. His research involves rapid solidification processing, plasma and solution synthesis of nanoparticles, magnetic field of processing materials, structural characterization by x-rays and electron microscopy and magnetic properties characterization as a function of field, temperature and frequency. He direct!
ed a Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) on high temperature magnetic 
materials for aircraft power applications and currently leads an ARPA-E program in 
magnetic materials for power electronics. He has served as proceeding Editor, Publication 
Chair and a member of the Program Committee for the Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 
(MMM) and Intermag Conferences. He has published over 250 papers and owns two patents in 
the field. He has co-authored, with Marc DeGraef, the textbook "Structure of 
Materials", Cambridge University Press, 2007 with a second edition in 2012.
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