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2009 winner
The winner of the 2009 Acta Materialia Gold Medal Award is Professor Y. Austin Chang of the University of Wisconsin (Madison). He received his B.S. degree from University of California, Berkeley, and his M.S. degree from University of Washington, Seattle, both in Chemical Engineering. His Ph.D. in Metallurgy is from UC-Berkeley. Professor Chang has been on the faculty of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison since 1980. He was appointed Professor in 1980, and Wisconsin Distinguished Professor (one of the first four) in 1988. Currently, as the Wisconsin Distinguished Professor Emeritus, he continues working with graduate students and participates in the departmental affairs. He is a Member of the National Academy of Engineering (1996), Foreign Member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (2000), Fellow of the Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS, 1991), and Fellow of ASM International (ASM, 1978).
In his professional career, Professor Chang has been a researcher and an educator. He has done research on thermodynamics of metal refining early in his career, followed by contributions in thermodynamic modeling/phase diagram calculations, as well as studies of scientifically interesting and technologically relevant structural, electronic, and magnetic properties of materials, in bulk or nanoscale form.
Among his honors/awards are the William Hume-Rothery Award (“in recognition of his outstanding scholarly contribution to the Science of Alloys”, TMS, 1989), the Extraction and Processing Lecturer Award (“for his work on the thermodynamics of metal refining”, TMS, 1993), the Albert Sauveur Achievement Award (“in recognition of pioneering achievements in materials science”, ASM, 1996), and the John Bardeen Award (“for seminal contribution to the understanding of metal/compound semiconductor interactions”, TMS, 2000). Among his other recognitions are the Champion H. Mathewson Medal (TMS, 1996), the Edward D. Campbell Memorial Lecture (“Phase Diagram Calculation in Teaching, Research and Industry”, Met. Trans., 2006, 37A, 273-305, ASM, 2003), and the Best Paper Award (Alloy Phase Diagram International Commission( APDIC), 1999.
Professor Chang was a Visiting Scientist at the Sandia National Labs, CA (summer 1971), Visiting Professor at Tohoku University, Japan, (Fall 1987) and at MIT, Cambridge, MA (Fall 1990), a Summer Faculty member at the Quantum Structure Research Initiative Group, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA (1999), and an Honorary Chair Professor, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan, ROC. He has also served as chair and educator at two academic departments, at UW-Milwaukee and then at UW-Madison, for a total of 15 years. The recognitions he received include Outstanding Instructor Award (UW-Milwaukee, 1972), Educator Award (TMS, 1990), and Albert Easton White Distinguished Teacher Award (ASM, 1994). He served as a Trustee of ASM (1981-84), as the 2000 President of TMS, and as the National President of Alpha Sigma Mu (1984), a National Honor Student Society for students in materials sciences. He was recently selected to serve as a Wisconsin Idea Fellow (in recognition of extraordinary public service on behalf of the University of Wisconsin to local communities, involving assistance, research and outreach to businesses and nonprofits, and impressive contributions to improving the quality of life and the economy of Wisconsin.
Professor Chang has authored and co-authored over 500 publications, including books, reviews, and non-scholarly papers for general information. He is a highly cited materials research scientist (I S HighlyCited, 2003). He also holds 2 patents.
Prof. Chang will receive his Gold Medal award during the Spring meeting of TMS in February 2009 in San Francisco, CA.
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