The Recipient of Lee Hsun Lecture Award, Prof. Gary Was from University of Michigan Visits IMR
At the invitation of the Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IMR, CAS), Prof. Gary Was from University of Michigan visited IMR from Jun 19th to 23th and conducted academic exchanges, as a recipient of Lee Hsun Lecture Award.
The Lee Hsun Lecture Awarding Ceremony was held on Jun 19th and presided over by Prof. HAN Enhou. Prof. ZHANG Jian, the deputy director presented the plaque of Lee Hsun Lecture Award to Prof. Was. After the ceremony, Prof. Was delivered a lecture for the research staff and graduates titled “Toward Radiation Resistant Materials for Conventional and Advanced Reactors”. During the lecture, Prof. Was clarify that materials with greater radiation resistance are required both for life extension of conventional reactors and for the viability of advanced reactor concepts. Then he listed challenges of radiation resistant materials development, as well as implementation to improve the integrity and performance of reactor components exposed to radiation-induced degradation. During the visit, Prof. Was also was invited to visit the Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science (SYNL), the State Key Laboratory of Metal Corrosion and Protection, the Environmental Corrosion Research Centre, etc.
Prof. Was received his Sc.D. from MIT in 1980. He is the Walter J. Weber, Jr. Professor of Sustainable Energy, Environmental and Earth Systems Engineering, and holds appointments in Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences, and Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Michigan. He has held position as Director of the Michigan Memorial Phoenix Energy Institute, Associate Dean of the College of Engineering and Chair of the Nuclear Engineering and Radiological Sciences Department. Prof. Was’ research is focused on materials for advanced nuclear energy systems and radiation materials science, including environmental effects on materials, radiation effects, ion beam surface modification of materials and nuclear fuels, ect. Most recently his group has led the development of proton irradiation as a technique for emulating neutron irradiation effects in reactor structural materials and has conducted some of the first stress corrosion cracking experiments of austenitic and ferritic alloys in supercritical water.
During his tenure at the University of Michigan, Prof. Was has graduated 28 Ph.D. students, created several graduate level courses dealing primarily with irradiation effects on materials, ion beam modification of materials and nuclear fuels. He served as chair of the Nuclear Engineering Department Heads Organization and co-authored the first ASEE report on Manpower in the Nuclear Industry. He has helped to organize more than a dozen technical symposia and is member of the American Society for Engineering Education, Materials Research Society, ASM International, the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, the NACE International, Sigma Xi and Tau Beta Pi. He is the director of three major laboratories at the University of Michigan: the Michigan Ion Beam Laboratory for Surface Modification and Analysis, the High Temperature Corrosion Laboratory and the Irradiated Materials Testing Laboratory. Prof. Was received the Presidential Young Investigator award from NSF in 1985 and in 1994 he received the Excellence in Research Award from the College of Engineering. He was awarded the Champion H. Matthews Award from TMS, the Outstanding Achievement Award and Special Achievement Award by the Materials Science and Technology Division of the American Nuclear Society and the 2008 Henry Marion Howe Medal from ASM. He is Fellow of the Materials Research Society, ASM International, NACE International and the American Nuclear Society. Prof. Was has published over 190 technical articles in referred, archival journals, presented over 300 conference papers, and delivered over 160 invited talks and seminars, and has published a graduate level textbook on Radiation Materials Science.
Prof. ZHANG Jian presented the plaque of Lee Hsun Lecture Award to Prof. Was (Image by IMR)
Prof. Was delivered a lecture for the research staff and graduates (Image by IMR)