Meeting many of the most critical challenges facing modern society requires advances in the materials that underpin new technologies. Examples include providing carbon-free and renewable energy, clean water, advanced medical treatments and devices, and sustainable materials manufacturing. New materials are also required for continued economic growth in areas as diverse as aerospace, computing, and sensors.
Materials scientists and engineers at UWMadison work toward solutions to these problems via research in a wide variety of areas. Research areas include ceramics, computational material science, composites, corrosion, electrical, optical, magnetic materials, growth and synthesis, joining, materials for energy, metals, materials characterization and microscopy, nanomaterials, phase transformations, photonics, polymers and biomaterials, materials for nuclear energy, quantum computing, self-assembly, semiconductors, structural materials and mechanical properties, surfaces and interfaces, sustainability, thin films, and wear.