Materials science Content / Materials science Content for ϲϿ Davis en Laser Purified Silica /blog/laser-purified-silica <p>Materials science and engineering researchers at the University of California, Davis, and materials company <a href="https://homerunresources.com/">Homerun Resources, Inc.</a>, have developed a groundbreaking one-step laser-pulse technique to purify raw silica sand to over 99.99% purity. The method is the first phase in a collaborative effort to create a pathway to a carbon-neutral process of deriving silicon from silica sand.</p> October 14, 2024 - 11:51am Andy Fell /blog/laser-purified-silica Physicists Expand Equation of State for Fermi-Hubbard Model /blog/physicists-expand-equation-state-fermi-hubbard-model <p>When studying complex materials, condensed matter physicists often harness the Fermi-Hubbard model to explore a material’s electric, magnetic and superconductive properties. But the model isn’t without limitations. Historically, its theoretical and experimental applications have been limited to atoms with electrons that exist in two possible states.</p> March 15, 2024 - 2:42pm Andy Fell /blog/physicists-expand-equation-state-fermi-hubbard-model Ultrafast Laser Pulses Could Lessen Data Storage Energy Needs /blog/ultrafast-laser-pulses-could-lessen-data-storage-energy-needs <p><span><span><span>A discovery from an experiment with magnets and lasers could be a boon to energy-efficient data storage. </span></span></span></p> <p><span><span><span>“We wanted to study the physics of light-magnet interaction,” said Rahul Jangid, who led the data analysis for the project while earning his Ph.D. in materials science and engineering at ϲϿ Davis under associate professor <a href="https://mse.engineering.ucdavis.edu/people/roopali-kukreja">Roopali Kukreja</a>. “What happens when you hit a magnetic domain with very short pulses of laser light?” </span></span></span></p> January 16, 2024 - 11:27am Andy Fell /blog/ultrafast-laser-pulses-could-lessen-data-storage-energy-needs Using Machine Learning to Find Reliable and Low-Cost Solar Cells /blog/using-machine-learning-find-reliable-and-low-cost-solar-cells <p><span><span><span><span><span><span><span><span>Researchers at the University of California, Davis College of Engineering are using machine learning to identify new materials for high-efficiency solar cells. Using high-throughput experiments and machine learning-based algorithms, they have found it is possible to forecast the materials’ dynamic behavior with very high accuracy, without the need to perform as many experiments. </span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p> April 17, 2023 - 12:04pm Andy Fell /blog/using-machine-learning-find-reliable-and-low-cost-solar-cells Using Machine Learning to Predict Properties of Complex Materials /blog/using-machine-learning-predict-properties-complex-materials <p>Germanium-manganese compounds can have a wide variety of structures with different electronic, magnetic or thermal properties. Scientists are interested in these materials which could have applications in next-generation technology for memory storage, sensors or electronics, among other things. But working out the properties of these materials can be challenging, especially for compounds that only exist under conditions of high heat or pressure.</p> July 03, 2020 - 8:22am Andy Fell /blog/using-machine-learning-predict-properties-complex-materials Anti-Solar Cells: A Photovoltaic Cell That Works at Night /curiosity/news/anti-solar-cells-photovoltaic-cell-works-night <p>What if solar cells worked at night? That’s no joke, according to Jeremy Munday, professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at ϲϿ Davis. In fact, a specially designed photovoltaic cell could generate up to 50 watts of power per square meter under ideal conditions at night, about a quarter of what a conventional solar panel can generate in daytime, according to a concept paper by Munday and graduate student Tristan Deppe.</p> January 29, 2020 - 1:51pm Andy Fell /curiosity/news/anti-solar-cells-photovoltaic-cell-works-night