应我校材料学院王玉金教授邀请,我校讲席教授、韩国科学技术学院(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology)材料科学与工程系杰出教授、韩国国家工程院院士Suk-Joong L. Kang于2024年11月7日-16日在我校进行访问交流、科研合作,并作学术报告,欢迎广大师生参加。
报告一:
题目:What we understand and what we need to know in sintering
时间:2024年11月7日(星期四),下午2:00—3:00
地点:哈工大科学园C3栋特种陶瓷研究所417报告厅
报告二:
题目:What we should consider to obtain fully dense ceramics
时间:2024年11月8日(星期五),下午2:00—3:00
地点:哈工大科学园C3栋特种陶瓷研究所417报告厅
报告人简介
Suk-Joong L. Kang
Distinguished Professor,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering,
Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology,
291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, 305–701,
Korea
E-mail: sjkang@kaist.ac.kr
Suk-Joong L. Kang is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). He is a member of Korean Academy of Science and Technology (1996), and National Academy of Engineering of Korea (2002). He received a Dr.-Ing degree from the Ecole Centrale de Paris (1980), and a Dr. d’ Etat degree from the University of Paris VI (1985). After joining KAIST in 1980, he also served as a Visiting Professor at the Stuttgart Max-Plank-Institut (’82-’83, ’88) at Samsung Electromechanics (’93-’94), at the University of New South Wales (’01-’02) and at the University of Tokyo (’08), and as President of the Korea Institute of Ceramic Engineering and Technology (KICET) (’15-’18).
Dr. Kang has published more than 280 papers on sintering and microstructural evolution in ceramics and metals. Since 2000, he has presented over 100 invited talks at international conferences. He is the author of the text Sintering: Densification, Grain Growth and Microstructure, published in 2005. He developed the “Pore Filling Theory” of liquid phase sintering. Since the late 1990’s, Dr. Kang has particularly contributed to the understanding of microstructural evolution by structural transition and defect formation at interfaces. He introduced the concept of the mixed control of boundary migration, and deduced the mixed mechanism principle of microstructural evolution. Dr. Kang is a fellow of the American Ceramic Society and a member of the World Academy of Ceramics, President-Elect of the International Ceramic Federation (’18-’20). He also served as President of the Korean Powder Metallurgy Institute (’06), the Korean Ceramic Society (’12), and the Asia-Oceania Ceramic Federation (’13-’14), and as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Asian Ceramic Societies (’13-’15). He is the recipient the Sosman Award from the American Ceramic Society (’11), the Richard Brook Award from the European Ceramic Society (’15), the Helmholtz International Fellow Award from the Helmholtz Gemeinschaft (Germany) (’15), the Inchon Prize from the Inchon Memorial Foundation (’07), and the Korea Engineering Prize from the President of the Republic of Korea (’10).