MRS Bulletin Volume Organizers Guide Technical Theme Topics for 1999
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ing. King received his doctorate degree, in 1979, from Oxford University. Following a brief period as a research fellow at Oxford, King joined the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a postdoctorate. He joined
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The MRS Bulletin Volume Organizers for 1999 are Marie-Isabelle Baraton (University of Limoges), Robert C. Cammarata (Johns Hopkins University), and Steve M. Yalisove (University of Michigan). They hâve selected an eclectic set of thèmes for the 1999 volume of MRS Bulletin, representing the efforts of a distinguished and international group of guest editors and authors. The volume will start and end with issues devoted to materials characterization. The first installment will discuss synchrotron radiation techniques for in situ characterization during materials processing, and the final installment will be devoted to neutron scattering methods. The gênerai area of materials chemistry will be covered in five issues involving the topics of membranes and membrane processing, corrosion science, chemical gas sensors, computer simulations of materials development and processing from thermochemical data, and the crystal chemistry of partially disordered materials. Materials science at the nanometer-length scale will be explored in three issues involving the thèmes of novel methods of nanoscale wire formation, the mechanical behavior of nanostructured materials, and the materials science of the cell. Issues covering rare-earth materials and advanced materials for energy storage will round out the rest of the volume. For a list of topics and guest editors for 1999, access the MRS Bulletin website at /www.mrs.org/. Marie-Isabelle Baraton is a senior scien58
the SUNY faculty in 1981. At MRS, King has served on the Program Committee and its Meetings Quality Subcommittee. He was a symposium organizer at the MRS 1993 Fall Meeting and
co-chair of the MRS 1997 Spring Meeting w h e r e h e i m p l e m e n t e d the Meeting Chairs' Poster Prize. He has served on the MRS Councilsince 1998. HEH
Organizers Guide Technical Thème Topics for 1999
tist in the D e p a r t m e n t of Ceramics (LMCTS, UMR CNRS) at the University of Limoges, France. She received a Doctorate in Science from the University of Limoges in 1979. In 1986 and 1987, she obtained a NATO grant to conduct research on infrared surface characterization of ultrafine powders and on Langmuir-Blodget films in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Ottawa, and in the Lash Miller Laboratories at the University of Toronto, C a n a d a . Baraton's current research interests include the physicalchemistry of nanomaterial surfaces (métal oxides, and non-oxide ceramics such as SiC, AIN, GaN, Si3N4...), as well as theoretical (ab initio calculations) and expérimental studies of chemical reactions at gasnanomaterials interfaces. Her research work finds applications in the dispersion of nanoparticles in polymeric matrices, semiconductor passivation and surface functionalization, gas sensing, self-assembled layers, and coatings. Baraton has coautho
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