The study of materials is one of the major areas of science, with legions of researchers in physics, chemistry and materials science working on this topic. Condensed matter physics is one of the largest research areas in physics. Yet, it makes me often uneasy how the benefits of materials science are promoted. It is all too often about applications, and not about fundamental physics. How materials such as graphene might revolutionize electronics. And how new physical concepts could be used to develop materials for energy applications: solar cells, batteries and so on. In classical materials science it’s often about tougher materials, such as enhanced steels, and less about the fundamental insights they are based on. Of course, applications are an important aspect in the study of materials. But does this mean that too often fundamental insights are neglected in favour of a material’s commercial potential?
Tag Archives: Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Welcome to my personal blog, where I write about the latest exciting developments in the natural sciences and bring my own perspective to scientific trends in these areas.
- Great, the physics Nobel prize for graphene! Now don’t overhype it… October 5, 2010
- Leaving Nature Materials September 12, 2012
- Transparency in peer review November 10, 2010
- Science in the age of austerity July 18, 2011
- Semiconductor optical switches reach the speed of light April 29, 2011
- What are the realistic promises of metamaterials and cloaking? November 16, 2010
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All That Matters by Joerg Heber is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Images or other third party material on this website may not be included in this Creative Commons license, as indicated in the relevant credit line.
November 7, 2011
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