Fall 2018 Newsletter

 

Prize Winners

Larson Fakhraai
Ron Larson (University of Michigan) wins the 2019 Polymer Physics Prize “For wide ranging, multi-disciplinary contributions to understanding the structure, dynamics, and rheology of polymeric materials in melt, solution, glassy, mesomorphic, and multi-phase states, including viscoelastic instabilities, constitutive equations, alignment transitions, and phase behavior.” Zahra Fakhraai (University of Pennsylvania) wins the 2019 John H. Dillon Medal “For exceptional investigations of surface effects in polymer glasses and amyloid aggregation.”

 

Deadlines

  • October 26: APS March Meeting abstracts
  • October 26: Nomination for Frank J. Padden Jr. award. Send nominations by email to Amalie Frischknecht (alfrisc@sandia.gov) using the subject line "Padden_name of student".
  • December 31: Nomination for the UK PPG lectureship. Send nominations by email to Darrin Pochan (pochan@udel.edu).

 

APS March Meeting 2019

From our 2019 DPOLY Program Chair…
We look forward to seeing you at the next APS March Meeting, March 4-8, 2019, in Boston, MA.

On behalf of the DPOLY program committee, I welcome you to submit an abstract and attend the
meeting. The abstract submission deadline is Friday, October 26th – just days away.

Overviews of our March Meeting are on our website and highlight
some of the diverse and exciting technical programming lined up for this year’s meeting. In addition to
submitting an abstract, we hope you will take the opportunity to share these overviews with colleagues
outside DPOLY who may be interested in attending the DPOLY meeting, either by posting them in your
department or by forwarding them the link. This is our best opportunity of the year to grow our
membership and continue strengthening DPOLY. Thank you for your participation in our division, and we
hope to see you this March.

Sincerely,
David S. Simmons

P.S. note that nominations for the Padden Award are due the same day (October 26); please email Amalie Frischknecht (alfrisc@sandia.gov) using the subject line "Padden_name of student".

 

2019 DPOLY Short Course

X-ray and Neutron Scattering for Polymer Science
Organized by Gila Stein
The DPOLY short course will introduce the principles of X-ray and Neutron Scattering from polymeric
materials. The first part of the course will focus on techniques that probe polymer structure, including
transmission scattering, reflectivity and grazing incidence, with emphasis on hard x-ray, soft x-ray and
neutron sources. The second part of the course will cover techniques that probe polymer dynamics,
including x-ray photon correlation spectroscopy, quasielastic neutron scattering, and neutron spin echo.
The course will conclude with an introduction to new challenges and opportunities, such as integration
of scattering with other experimental methods, machine learning, and big data.

 

New Fellows

Mark Foster (The University of Akron)
Citation: For the elucidation of molecular architecture effects on surface segregation and polymeric
film surface fluctuations using neutron and X-ray scattering techniques.

Ryan Hayward (University of Massachusetts Amherst)
Citation: For developing innovative approaches to control the structure and properties of polymeric
materials through processes of elastic buckling and self-assembly.

Chinedum Osuji (University of Pennsylvania)
Citation: For insightful determination of the structure and functional properties of soft materials and
especially the self-assembly and processing of polymers by the novel application of external fields
such as chemical surface forces, magnetic fields and periodic pressure gradients.

Keiji Tanaka (Kyushu University)
Citation: For developing innovative methods that significantly enhance our understanding of the
conformation, structure and relaxations of polymers confined to thin films and their interfaces with
solid substrates, liquids, and other environments.

 

Elections

Candidates for Vice-Chair are:
Spiros Anastasiadis (University of Crete), spiros@iesl.forth.gr and
Ramanan Krishnamoorti (University of Houston), ramanan@uh.edu

Candidates for Member-at-Large are:
Laura Clarke (NC State University), liclarke@ncsu.edu
Thomas Epps, III (University of Delaware), thepps@udel.edu and
Chris Soles (NIST), christopher.soles@nist.gov

Many thanks to the nominating committee (chaired by Dvora Perahia and comprising Rohan Hule, Rod
Priestly, Scott Milner, and Valeriy Ginsburg) for preparing this slate of candidates. If you have
additional nominations, please send them (by early November with supporting signatures from a total
of at least 15 DPOLY members) to Steve Hudson, DPOLY Secretary/Treasurer
(steven.hudson@nist.gov).

The election will be held shortly.

 

Get Connected Online

Please join DPOLY’s online sites webpage www.dpoly.org with announcements of meetings and positions available, resumes, journal feeds (administered by Chinedum Osuji) and Facebook page www.facebook.com/groups/409711462832417/. (moderated by Zahra Fakhraai and Chinedum Osuji)

 

Membership

To join DPOLY or renew your membership, please go to the DPOLY website. On the right side, under “More from APS” you will see “Join a unit”. If you click there and then log in to the database, you will be able to click on your membership tab and “Add Unit”. The division pays for the first year of membership for first time members. Please encourage others to join. Thanks.

 

Other Meetings of Interest

Announcements of other meetings can be sent to www.dpoly.org (contacting Chinedum Osuji) and to DPOLY Secr Steve Hudson for posting online.

Exploiting the Functionality of Soft Materials (https://www.grc.org/complex-active-and-adaptivematerial- systems-conference/2019/ ) is a GRC, inaugurated in 2017, that will meet in January. Please contact Julia Yeomans, Chair, or Rich Vaia, Vice Chair (https://www.grc.org/contactorganizers/?Id=17359&isCa=False)


This DPOLY newsletter was edited by Steve Hudson, DPOLY Secretary-Treasurer.