Advanced Multicomponent Alloys
2 contributors - Hardback
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Dr. Zengbao Jiao is an Associate Professor at the Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong. He received his PhD from City University of Hong Kong in 2014 and worked as a postdoc at City University of Hong Kong in 2015 and at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2016. His research interests focus on the development of advanced structural materials, including ultra-high strength steels, high-entropy alloys, high-temperature superalloys, and nanostructured metals and alloys. Dr. Jiao has published 2 book chapters and more than 70 papers in technical journals, including 2 papers in Science, 2 in Nature Communications, 1 in Materials Today, and 15 in Acta Materialia. He received various honors and awards, including the Acta Materialia & Scripta Materialia Outstanding Reviewer Award and Intermetallics Outstanding Reviewer Award.
Dr. Tao Yang is currently an Assistant Professor at the Department of Materials Science and Engineering in City University of Hong Kong. Dr. YANG has achieved many high-impact researches (H-index of 23), which have been published in various top journals like Science (2 papers as the first author, 1 as the corresponding author), Advanced Materials (1), Materials Today (1), Nature Communications (2), and Acta Materialia (9) and Scripta Materialia (9), etc. His research focuses on the innovative design and fabrication of advanced metallic materials for structural and functional applications, including the high-entropy alloys, intermetallic materials, high-temperature superalloys, deep cryogenic alloys, and electrocatalysis materials. His current work is primarily focused on the control of nanoprecipitation, grain-boundary characters, and atomic structures by using multiple state-of-the-art techniques, such as the 3D atom probe tomography (3D-APT), high-resolution transmission electron microscope (HR-TEM), and 3D printing. He is now responsible for the teaching on materials science to both undergraduate and postgraduate students, like the course of Advanced Structural Materials.