Materials Science

Research into the nature of materials promises to revolutionize many areas of modern life, from power generation and transmission to transportation to the production of faster, smaller, more versatile computers and storage devices. Materials science is an interdisciplinary field that incorporates chemistry, physics, and engineering both to provide a deeper understanding of existing materials and to allow for the design of new materials with predetermined properties. Computational scientists are using the supercomputers at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility to study the nature of materials at the smallest possible scale.

Ab Initio Simulations of Carrier Transports in Organic and Inorganic Nanosystems

Principal Investigator: Lin-Wang Wang, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Jaguar: 25,000,000 hours

Computational Prediction and Discovery of Magnet Materials

Principal Investigator: Bruce Harmon, Ames Laboratory
Titan: 45,000,000 hours

Non-Covalent Bonding in Complex Molecular Systems with Quantum Monte Carlo

Principal Investigator: Dario Alfe, University College London
Jaguar: 55,000,000 hours

Predictive and Insightful Calculations of Energy Materials

Principal Investigator: Paul Kent, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Titan: 45,000,000 hours

Quantum Monte Carlo Simulations of Hydrogen and Water Ice

Principal Investigator: Richard Needs, University of Cambridge
Titan: 75,000,000 hours

Safety in Numbers: Discovery of New Solid Li-Ion Electrolytes

Principal Investigator: Boris Kozinsky, Bosch
Titan: 48,000,000 hours

Scalable First Principles Calculations for Materials at Finite Temperature

Principal Investigator: Markus Eisenbach, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Jaguar: 105,000,000 hours

Materials Science Projects