Arizona State University
  • ASU Home
  • ASU A-Z Index
  • My ASU
  • Colleges & Schools
  • Directory
  • Map
  • SIGN IN
 

July 09, 2009
twitter twitter    subscribe subscribe news asu[insight]   
  • now
  • science & tech
  • business, culture & affairs
  • university
  • sports
  • archives
  • press room

featured

  • Week in Review Gallery: Jan. 30-Feb. 5

today's headlines

  • ASU among top schools for Peace Corps volunteers
  • Teach-in aims to re-envision 'community'
  • From fossils to nanoresearch, student pursues scientific chase

editor's picks

  • Silent auction for student who lost leg in Haiti earthquake
  • Wrestling coach aims to take team to the top
  • $2.3M grant powers teen health study

Subhash Mahajan

Read More

  • Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering
  • College of Technology and Innovation
  • Research and Economic Affairs
  • Research Stories
  • School of Letters & Sciences
  • College of Liberal Arts & Sciences
  • School of Sustainability
  • Global Institute of Sustainability
  • The Biodesign Institute at ASU

Professor wins international award for materials research

Subhash Mahajan, Fulton Technical Fellow in the Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, is being recognized by the Institute of Metal Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences for his accomplishments in materials science and engineering.

The institute has selected Mahajan as the most recent winner of the Lee Hsun Award for his achievements. Hsun was director of the institute for more than 30 years.

Mahajan is visiting the institute in Shenyang, China, to accept the award and present lectures on July 14 and 16.

In lectures titled “Formation of Deformation Twins in Metallic Crystals” and “Accommodation of Deformation Twins in Metals and Alloys,” Mahajan will discuss advances in methods to shape metals and alloys.

Slip and deformation twinning are two processes by which metals and alloys can be reformed when subjected to external stress. The slip processes are relatively well understood, Mahajan says, but questions remain about the deformation twinning process. He and fellow ASU researchers “are the first to show how deformation twins evolve,” he says, “and since twins are associated with shape change, stress concentrations can develop within a solid when it deforms by slip and twinning. We developed detailed experimental evidence on the relaxation of these stresses.”

Progress in this area would improve capabilities of reshaping metals, such as those used to manufacture automobiles.

Mahajan is an ASU Regents Professor, the highest honor bestowed on university faculty.

Joe Kullman, joe.kullman@asu.edu
(480) 965-8122
Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering
Share this story:
  • Email this pageEmail this page
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Furl
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • Yahoo
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • Copyright & Trademark
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Emergency
  • Contact ASU

Site contact | ASU News Staff
Centerpoint, suite 416 | Map
Campus mail: 5011 ­ASU News
Phone: (480) 965-3502
FAX: (480) 965-2159

sod110