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The centerpiece of MS&T
'03 will be its technical program. In several ways,
the program will reflect the traditions established by the TMS
and ISS meetings that have been merged into this new conferencethe ISS
MECHANICAL WORKING AND STEEL PROCESSING CONFERENCE
and the TMS
FALL MEETING.
The complete preliminary technical program can be downloaded and viewed in portable document format using ADOBE ACROBAT:
CLICK
TO DOWNLOAD THE FINAL TECHNICAL PROGRAM (~1.7
Mb)
MS&T
'03 will include five spotlight topical symposia
that are being jointly developed by TMS
and ISS:
- Austenite
Formation and Decomposition
- Automotive Sheet Steels
- Process Control and Optimization in Ferrous and Nonferrous Industry
- Processing-Structure-Property-Performance Relationships
- Structure-Property
Relationships in High Performance Ferrous Based Systems Possessing
Composite-Like Structures
In presentations both broad and specific, MS&T
'03 will feature invited and contributed papers by
speakers who articulate theoretical and practical concepts; ferrous
and nonferrous technologies; advanced and fundamental applications;
proposed and hands-on processing methodologies; the present and
future of metals and materials industries.
Technical Sessions
Technical sessions will begin on Monday morning, November 10, 2003, and end on Wednesday,
November 12, 2003. All technical sessions will be held at the Hyatt Regency Chicago.
Abstracts will be available by accessing the TMS Conference Management System (CMS). If you do not have access to the internet, please contact
TMS Technical Services for a copy of the technical session abstracts. The abstracts will also be
published in the MS&T ‘03 Final Program distributed at the meeting to all speaker, member, and
non-member registration category attendees.
2003 TMS Fall Meeting
3-DIMENSIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE
Sponsored by:
ASM International: Materials Science Critical Technology Sector
TMS Structural Materials Division
In recent years, significant advances have been made in materials characterization, representation,
and modeling. In particular, serial sectioning techniques and X-ray microtomography methods
have been increasingly used to probe the 3-D microstructures of advanced materials such
as structural foams, metallic and non-metallic composites, and ferrous and non-ferrous alloys.
These newer experimental techniques have had a powerful influence on the rapidly-advancing field
of computational materials science, where microstructural data can be input into models to gain
new insight into deformation, processing, and phase transformations in these complex multi-phase
materials systems. Computerization brings to the forefront a new problem, that of mathematical
representation and manipulation of the data sets. An additional emphasis of the symposium will
therefore be the development of methods for microstructural representation that will allow rapid diffusion
of data throughout the materials science community, provide for automated data generation
and handling and to allow for machine based decision making from microstructural information.
This symposium is the second of a series of annual TMS symposia focusing on 3-dimensional
aspects of materials science and its associated problems. It intends to bring together experimentalists
and computational materials scientists with experts in 3-D techniques, virtual reality and
advanced computer graphics, and representation. From this, it is intended to build a common
basis for research topics that is truly interdisciplinary. One full session in the symposium is
planned as a workshop, with invited speakers.
Topics Covered:
- Serial sectioning techniques: manual and automated
- X-ray microtomography methods
- 2-D and 3-D modeling of deformation and phase transformations
- Mathematical representation of microstructural information
- Virtual reality and computer graphics
- Toward a Web-based virtual microstructural database
AFFORDABLE METAL-MATRIX COMPOSITES FOR HIGHPERFORMANCE
APPLICATIONS
Sponsored by:
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-Composite Materials Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
Metal-matrix composites (MMCs) have been used in certain aerospace, automotive, and electronic
components and are being considered for more applications in aerostructures, aeropropulsion,
space propulsion, automotive, and electronic components. Most of the applications of
MMCs were primarily driven by the superior stiffness and strength as compared to monolithic
alloys. Affordable MMCs could be potential candidates for many high-performance applications,
and strength and tailorable CTE play an important role. The purpose of this symposium is to discuss
the technical challenges pertaining to the high-performance applications. This symposium
will cover all the relevant aspects of MMC technology such as selection/development of a suitable
matrix alloy, processing techniques, microstructural characterization, and mechanical properties.
The issues related with aerospace and space applications of MMCs will be emphasized.
This symposium will primarily focus on the particulate-reinforced metallic composites, but will
also cover continuous fiber-reinforced metallic composites. Other advanced materials such as
dispersion-strengthened alloys and unreinforced alloys will also be considered. These systems
include metallic composites systems such as aluminum, titanium, copper, magnesium, nickel,
niobium, etc.
CASTING AND SOLIDIFICATION OF FERROUS ALLOYS
Sponsored by:
TMS Materials Processing & Manufacturing Division
MPMD-Solidification Committee
This symposium will address recent advances in the casting and solidification of cast iron, steel,
and other ferrous alloys. Topics will include novel industrial innovations, new applications of casting
technology, modeling efforts, and the results of new experiments.
CONTROL OF MELT-RELATED DEFECTS IN HIGH TEMPERATURE ALLOYS
Sponsored by:
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-High Temperature Alloys Committee
Today’s component performance expectations and associated designs place increasingly higher
demands on the structural soundness of high temperature alloys in applications such as advanced
gas turbines. Stringent material cleanliness requirements have led to efforts to further minimize
potential material defects and to the establishment of tighter controls on maximum permissible
defect sizes. Experience suggests that potential material defects can be inherited from meltrelated
processes, which can affect both castings and wrought products, (e.g., in investment castings
for jet engines or large-diameter ingot feedstock for industrial gas turbine forgings.)
This symposium aims at providing a forum for communication and discussion involving three
main participant types:
- Equipment builders who define critical material requirements based on
their designs
- Foundries and mills who face the challenge to supply those materials or parts
- Academia who could contribute significantly to technological progress by
elucidating the fundamental mechanisms of defect formation and developing
potential control methodologies.
The focus will be on current and future material design requirements, state-of-the-art industrial
practice in controlling defects, development and introduction of novel melting techniques,
advances in nondestructive testing, process modeling and understanding of mechanisms of
defect formation, and their ramifications for material properties. Primarily Ni-base superalloys
and Ti-base alloys will be addressed.
EFFECT OF PROCESSING ON MATERIALS PROPERTIES FOR NUCLEAR
WASTE DISPOSITION
Sponsored by:
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-Corrosion and Environmental Effects Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
SMD-Nuclear Materials Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
The issue of nuclear waste disposal in the U.S. is currently in the national and local news. Discarding
nuclear waste is also an area of concern for many other nations that are planning their
respective repositories. Many types of materials, especially metallic, will be used for the containment,
transportation, and final disposal of nuclear waste. This symposium will address the effect
of material (alloy) processing on their properties as related to nuclear waste disposal. Presentations
will cover areas such as metallurgy and fabrication. This will include alloy composition,
heat-to-heat variability, hot working, processing, welding methods, forming, surface finish, and
heat treatment. Studies may focus on effects produced on weldability, element segregation, weld
defect quantification, mechanical properties, annealing method, residual stress mitigation, general
and localized corrosion, environmentally assisted cracking, lifetime performance, etc.
FRONTIERS OF X-RAY MICRO- AND NANO-BEAM DIFFRACTION
Sponsored by:
ASM International: Materials Science Critical Technology Sector
TMS Materials Processing & Manufacturing Division
MPMD-Phase Transformation Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
The availability of intense synchrotron X-ray sources now allows for X-ray diffraction measurements
with micro to nanometer resolution. This new experimental information is certain to
advance our understanding of mesoscale dynamics and can address long-standing issues of
materials behavior. This symposium will summarize the current state-of-the art through a series
of invited papers, will solicit contributed papers on novel new instrumentation and techniques,
and will present examples of applications to materials. A special effort will be made to include
representatives from synchrotrons around the world with active efforts in X-ray microprobe and
nanoprobe diffraction.
PB-FREE AND PB-BEARING SOLDERS
Sponsored by:
TMS Electronic, Magnetic & Photonic Materials Division
EMPMD-Electronic Packaging and Interconnection Materials Committee
This symposium will provide a forum for exchange of ideas and recent findings in the currently
popular field of electronic solders. It will consist of invited and contributed papers from leading
research groups in universities, national laboratories, and industrial/manufacturing facilities in
the United States and abroad.
POWDER MATERIALS: CURRENT RESEARCH AND INDUSTRIAL PRACTICES
Sponsored by:
TMS Materials Processing and Manufacturing Division
MPMD-Powder Materials Committee
This symposium will draw presentations from industry, academia, and government laboratories
on current research and/or industrial practices in powder materials. Coverage will include a wide
range of areas such as: powder making, powder conditions, reactive powder handling, powder
characterization, hot and cold uniaxial pressing, hot and cold isostatic pressing, powder rolling,
extrusion, sintering, heat treatment and processing facilities, rapid and directional solidification and
consolidation, in-situ synthesis of composites, ceramics and intermetallics, atmospheric and low
pressure plasma spray, flame spray, wire arc spray, alloy and materials development, mechanical
behavior of bulk powder-based materials, physical-based mathematical models, theories, simulation,
micromechanisms, and end use products. The goal is to bring together scientists, engineers
,and manufacturers both as speakers and audience and to create a forum on both fundamental
and technological aspects.
PROCESSING AND PROPERTIES OF STRUCTURAL MATERIALS
Sponsored by:
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-Structural Materials Committee
This symposium covers research into the processing and properties of structural materials that
include ferrous and non-ferrous alloys, intermetallics, ceramics, and composites. Processing
encompasses all types of processing for bulk materials including but not limited to: processing
of powder-based bulk materials, reaction synthesis, thermomechanical processing, casting, and
polymer composite processing. The effect of processing on the product properties is an important
feature of this symposium. However, presentations will also focus largely on processing and
properties. PROCESSING AND PROPERTIES OF STRUCTURAL NANOMATERIALS
Sponsored by:
TMS Materials Processing and Manufacturing Division
TMS Structural Materials Division
MPMD-Powder Materials Committee
SMD-Mechanical Behavior of Materials Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
This symposium will focus on recent advances in structural nanomaterials that have grain
and/or particle sizes below 100 nm. The objective of this symposium is to provide a forum for
researchers, producers, and users to present the most recent results combined with in-depth discussion
on the fundamental issues and technological applications of this new class of materials.
Topics will include synthesis/processing, characterization of structure and mechanical properties,
processing/structure/property relationships, thermal stability, phase transformations, theory,
modeling, performance, and applications.
THE ACCELERATED IMPLEMENTATION OF MATERIALS & PROCESSES
Sponsored by:
ASM International: Materials Science Critical Technology Sector
TMS Structural Materials Division
ASM/MSCTS-Thermodynamics & Phase Equilibria Committee
Jt. EMPMD/SMD-Chemistry & Physics of Materials Committee
MPMD-Computational Materials Science of Engineering (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
Emerging efforts in materials modeling are leading to incremental improvements in specific
areas, (e.g., materials processing and mechanical behavior). There is growing belief that the
time scale between development of a new material and its implementation into production can be
significantly shortened only through a revolutionary change in materials development methodologies,
which builds on such materials modeling. The resulting pay-off will be a substantial reduction
in the time required for the development of cost-competitive automotive and aerospace systems
with higher performance and greater fuel efficiency. This is to be accomplished by using the
required technical content and fidelity of the “designer knowledge base” to drive the optimized
development/use of models and experiments.
Critical to this effort will be understanding how to effectively use materials models, link them
across various length and time scales and couple them with experiments to yield the appropriate
information for the designer. In addition, methodologies to “warrant” the contents of the designer
knowledge base against the uncertainties inherent in materials processing, characterization, and
testing must be developed. This symposium offers a view of approaches toward accelerated
implementations of materials and key technical limitations needing attention.
Topics of discussion:
- Strategic development decisions for all materials
-
Development and reduction of insertion risk for “new materials”
- Improvement of workflow and productivity through digitization
- Enhanced linkage of materials to design and customer requirements
- Assessment and quantification of key uncertainty sources in materials
processing, characterization, and testing
45th ISS Mechanical Working and Steel Processing Conference
IRON & STEEL SOCIETY’S MECHANICAL WORKING AND STEEL
PROCESSING CONFERENCE
Sponsored by:
ISS MWSP
Topics include:
- Long products and forging
- Flat rolled products
- Product physical metallurgy
- Roll technology
MS&T ’03 Joint TMS/ISS Program
AUSTENITE FORMATION AND DECOMPOSITION
Sponsored by:
ISS MWSP
TMS
ISS-Product Physical Metallurgy Committee
MPMD-Phase Transformations Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
This international symposium will bring academic and industrial experts in austenite formation
and decomposition together to present the latest developments. Recent advances in the understanding
of the mechanistic, diffusional, and thermodynamic aspects of austenite formation and
decomposition as well as the ability to measure, characterize, and model these phenomena provide
impetus for this symposium. Topics will include the effects of processing on austenite formation
or decomposition, computational modeling, analytical methods for measurement of austenite
formation and decomposition, characterization of microstructures, and the effect of alloys, residuals,
and precipitates.
AUTOMOTIVE SHEET STEELS
Sponsored by:
ISS MWSP
TMS
This symposium will discuss substrate developments, coating technology, surface issues, and
conversion technologies of automotive sheet steels. Papers reviewing development activities for
new automotive steel grades are encouraged as well as studies investigating forming operations
(e.g., stamping, hydroforming, roll forming, etc.) and final vehicle performance (e.g., durability
and crash energy management). Studies on the effects of mechanical properties, surface friction,
lubrication, and forming mode on formability (forming limits, springback, surface appearance,
etc.) are also featured.
PROCESS CONTROL AND OPTIMIZATION IN FERROUS AND
NONFERROUS INDUSTRY
Sponsored by:
TMS Extraction & Processing Division
ISS MWSP
TMS Materials Processing & Manufacturing Division
Jt. MPMD/EPD-Process Modeling Analysis & Control Committee
This symposium will discuss recent technological development in process control and optimization
in the field of extraction and processing of metals and materials, both in ferrous and nonferrous
industries. Although distinct from each other, ferrous and nonferrous metals extraction and
processing have many aspects of process control, optimization, and technology development in
common and a shared symposium on these issues should benefit both industries. Specific topics
may include:
- control and optimization of the feed morphology and composition in processes
such as ore sintering, nickel/copper, lead/zinc, and aluminum/magnesium
smelting and processing
- control and optimization of the chemistry and transport properties of slags, steels,
metals, mattes, and aqueous solutions
- minimization of refractory degradation
- control of technologically and environmentally undesirable minor components in
product and waste streams
- control of process parameters in iron sintering, blast furnace, electrical furnaces,
flash furnace, converters, refining vessels, etc.
- process automation
PROCESSING-STRUCTURE-PROPERTY-PERFORMANCE RELATIONSHIPS
Sponsored by:
ISS MWSP
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-Physical Metallurgy Committee
The thermal or thermomechanical history of a ferrous alloy dictates the final microstructure,
which, in turn, governs the performance of the material. This symposium will focus on relationships
between process history and properties in iron alloys, with a focus on the correlation
between microstructural development and properties. This symposium will present current practices
and new developments in understanding the evolution of structures, with an emphasis on
the significance to ferrous alloy performance. Topical areas will include:
- Processing
- Thermomechanical history
- Texture evolution
- Microstructural evolution
- Thermodynamic/kinetic phase boundaries
- Phase transformations
- Metallographic characterization
- Performance
- Mechanical properties and constitutive modeling
- Physical properties
- Damage and fracture behavior
STRUCTURE-PROPERTY RELATIONSHIPS IN HIGH-PERFORMANCE
FERROUS- BASED SYSTEMS POSSESSING COMPOSITE-LIKE STRUCTURES
Sponsored by:
ASM International: Materials Science Critical Technology Sector
ISS MWSP
TMS Structural Materials Division
SMD-Composite Materials Committee (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
SMD-Mechanical Behavior of Materials (Jt. ASM-MSCTS)
There are a number of commercially available and industrially relevant ferrous-based systems
which exhibit composite-like structures (e.g., spherodized steels, pearlitic steels, dual phase
steels, TRIP Steels, advanced high strength steels, etc.). The mechanisms of strengthening and
fracture of such materials provide important insights into the design of materials with high specific
strength, formability, and fracture resistance. In addition, there are a number of emerging ferrous-
based systems (e.g., amorphous, nano-crystalline) that are being explored to take advantage of
some of the unique combinations of properties that such systems may provide. This symposium
will bring researchers and end users together to cover evolving research and development opportunities
in the ferrous materials area. Advanced high strength materials, TRIP steels, and dual
phase steels are of particular interest, while emerging systems such as amorphous and nanocrystalline
materials will also be represented. Opportunities for funding will also be covered.
General Abstract Information
Sponsored by:
ISS MWSP
TMS
ISS and TMS are sponsoring general abstract sessions as an important part of MS&T '03. In an
effort to present a more comprehensive view, current work is being carried on in materials science
research, particularly new and emerging technologies and techniques.
General Poster Session
A poster session will be held in conjunction with the MS&T '03 Meeting. Presentations will be
displayed on 4’x8’ poster boards; no formal oral presentation is required. The poster session
will begin on Monday, November 10 and remain in place through Wednesday, November 12.
Abstracts may be submitted through the TMS Conference Management System (CMS); e-mail: raabe@tms.org; mail: Christina Raabe, TMS, 184 Thorn Hill
Road, Warrendale, PA 15086; or fax: (724) 776-3770. |
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