Projects: Custom Search |
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Reference Number | EP/Y03712X/1 | |
Title | Materials irradiation: from basics to applications (MAMBA) | |
Status | Started | |
Energy Categories | Nuclear Fission and Fusion (Nuclear Fission, Nuclear supporting technologies) 40%; Not Energy Related 60%; |
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Research Types | Basic and strategic applied research 100% | |
Science and Technology Fields | PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Chemistry) 20%; PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Physics) 30%; PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Metallurgy and Materials) 50%; |
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UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation | Not Cross-cutting 100% | |
Principal Investigator |
Dr L Stella Mathematics & Physics Queen's University Belfast |
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Award Type | Standard | |
Funding Source | EPSRC | |
Start Date | 15 April 2024 | |
End Date | 14 April 2028 | |
Duration | 48 months | |
Total Grant Value | £38,959 | |
Industrial Sectors | ||
Region | Northern Ireland | |
Programme | UKRI MSCA | |
Investigators | Principal Investigator | Dr L Stella , Mathematics & Physics, Queen's University Belfast (100.000%) |
Web Site | ||
Objectives | ||
Abstract | Quite frequently matter is subject to irradiation. One can think of electronic devices in space, radiotherapies, materials processing bysputtering, nanoparticle modification, materials in the civil nuclear industry, radiation detectors, and many others. There is a commondenominator to these scenarios, and is that radiation brings matter out of equilibrium, sometimes quite dramatically as in laserablation, leading to a variety of physical, chemical, and biological phenomena at all scales, starting at the attosecond and nanometerwith electronic excitation, and going up to meters and days or even years at the engineering or biological scale, where macroscopicphenomena like failure, fracture, explosion, or death can occur as a consequence of irradiation. Sometimes the goal is to avoid ormitigate damage, and other times is to harness the effects of radiation to alter the properties of materials. In all these scenarios it iscrucial to understand the fundamental mechanisms of material response to intense and fast energy deposition.The research aim of MAMBA is to advance our understanding of material response to irradiation and to apply it to tailor and controlthe properties of materials exposed, purposedly or involuntarily, to intense radiation environments. We have selected five casestudies lying at the frontier of knowledge, and spanning applications in diverse, although connected, fields: space electronics,photovoltaic cells for space applications, radiation-resistant nanostructures for nuclear fusion applications, radiation detectors forclinical studies, proton radiotherapy, and radiolytic hydrogen generation in nuclear decommissioning. These topics will be addressedthrough a combination of experimental and modelling techniques that, to a large degree, are common to these areas. Thiscommonality allows for cross-pollination between themes and for implementing a rich training program that includes Schools, workshops and many PM of secondments | |
Publications | (none) |
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Final Report | (none) |
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Added to Database | 24/04/24 |