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Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs (2003)

Chapter: Appendix A: Meeting Speakers

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
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Appendixes

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
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APPENDIX A Meeting Speakers

DECEMBER 6–7, 1999

DEFENSE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY RELIANCE SUBAREA FOR MATERIALS AND PROCESSES WORKSHOP

ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND

December 6, 1999

 

Overview of M/P Reliance Status

Lewis Sloter, ODDR&E

Army M&P Program Update

Dennis Viechnicki, ARL

Navy M&P Program Update

Robert Pohanka, ONR

December 7, 1999

 

Air Force M&P Program Update

Robert Rapson, AFRL

DARPA M&P Program Update

Steven Wax, DSO

BMDO M&P Program Update

James Shoemaker, BMDO

History of DoD Materials

Jerome Persh, IDA

Technical Panel (TP) Breakout Sessions with NMAB committee members

 

TP 1.0—Platform Structural Materials

Scott Tiebert, AFRL

TP 2.0—Power and Propulsion Materials

Kathy Stevens, AFRL

TP 3.0—Armor/AntiArmor Materials

Robert Dowding, ARL

TP 4.0—Electronic Materials

Bill Woody, AFRL

TP 5.0—Laser-Hardened Materials

George Mueller, NRL

TP 6.0 (A)—Operational Support Materials

Gume Rodriguez, ARL

TP 6.0 (B)—Nondestructive Evaluation

Ignatio Perez, NRL

TP 7.0—Signature Control Materials

Don Woodbury, ARL

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

FEBRUARY 15–16, 2000

NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

WASHINGTON, D.C.

February 15, 2000

 

Overview of DoD Vision and System Needs

Andrew Marshall, OSD

Overview of Army Vision and System Needs

Michael Andrews, U.S. Army

Overview of Military Transformation and Future Warfare

Michael Vickers, Center for Strategic and BudgetaryAssessments

Overview of Air Force Vision and System Needs

Lawrence Delaney, U.S. Air Force

Overview of Navy Vision and System Needs

Ronald De Marco, ONR

Overview of Marines Vision and System Needs

Gen. Alan Gray, retired (U.S. Marine Corps)

Revolution in Military Affairs After Next

Lonnie Henley, Defense Intelligence Agency

Brainstorm Session on Systems Needs

Millard Firebaugh, Facilitator

February 16, 2000

 

Overview of ARO Materials Programs

Andrew Crowson, ARO

Overview of AFOSR Materials Programs

Lyle Schwartz, AFOSR

Air Force Chief Scientist Study (Overview of Air Force S&T Needs)

Kenneth Harwell, AFRL

Overview of NSF Materials Programs

Thomas Weber, NSF

Overview of DOE Materials Programs

Robert Gottschall, DOE

Brainstorm Session on Materials Areas

Julia Phillips, Facilitator

APRIL 18–20, 2000

ARNOLD AND MABEL BECKMAN CENTER

IRVINE, CALIFORNIA

April 18, 2000

 

Recap of Systems Needs Session from February Meeting

Millard Firebaugh

Summary of Navy Needs

Millard Firebaugh

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

Summary of Army Needs

John Gassner

Summary of Air Force Needs

George Peterson

Recap of Panels Structure from February Meeting

Julia Phillips

Structural Materials

Richard Tressler

Electronic/Photonic Materials

Meyya Meyyappan

BioMaterials

Michael Jaffe

Energy/Power Materials

John Gassner

Multifunctional (Other) Materials

Frank Karasz

April 19, 2000

 

Structural Materials Challenges for Long-Term Defense Needs

Anthony Evans, Princeton University

Materials Research at Bell Laboratories

Bertram Batlogg, Lucent Technologies

Biology as Our Mentor for Materials Research—Can We Learn from Its Example?

Mark Alper, University of California, Berkeley

Computational Materials Science to Meet Long-Term Needs

Stephen Foiles, Sandia National Laboratories

Carbon Nanotubes and Other Revolutionary Materials and Processes—Industry View

Fred Herman, Lockheed Martin

Emerging Organic Materials and Processes—Long-Term Challenges

Samuel Stupp, Northwestern University

Review of Enabling Crosscutting Areas for Materials Research

Millard Firebaugh, General Dynamics

April 20, 2000

 

Transition of New Materials to Development of Systems—Cost Perspective

Paul Kaminski, Technovation, Inc.

Power Source Materials and Technologies—Long-Term View

Daniel Doughty, Sandia National Laboratories

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

JUNE 28, 2000

J. ERIK JONSSON CENTER

WOODS HOLE, MASSACHUSETTS

June 28, 2000

 

Debriefing and Discussion—Out of the Box and Into the Future: A Dialogue Between Warfighters and Scientists on Far-Future Warfare (2025) Conference, June 26-27, 2000, Washington, D.C., organized by the Potomac Institute for Policy Studies

Sharon Yeung, National Research Council

MARCH 28-29, 2001

NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

WASHINGTON, D.C.

March 28, 2001

 

DoD Study Sponsors’ Expectations and Feedback

Steven Wax, DARPA

Future DoD Systems and Impact of Materials Advances—Army Perspective

LTG Paul Kern, U.S. Army

March 29, 2001

 

Structural and Multifunctional Materials

 

Overview of Multifunctional Materials

Steve Wax, DARPA

Multifunctional Materials—Navy/DoD Perspective

Virginia DeGiorgi, NRL

Ceramic Structural Materials

Ron Kerans, AFRL

Metallic/Intermetallic Structural Materials

Dennis Dimiduk, AFRL

Polymer Structural Materials

Eric Wetzel, ARL

Metallic Structural Materials

Julie Christodoulou, ONR

Energy and Power Materials

 

Energy Conversion and Harvesting Materials

Bob Nowak, DARPA

High Power Microwaves and High Power Lasers

Tim Andreadis, NRL

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

Air Force Needs and Programs for Magnetic Materials

Richard Fingers, WPAFB

Explosives, Pyrotechnics, and Propellants

Brad Forch, ARL

Energy, Storage, and Thermal Sciences Branch Over

Dave Ryan, WPAFB

Electronic and Photonic Materials

 

Overview of Electronic (and Photonic) Materials

Valerie Browning, DARPA

Electronic Materials

Bill Mitchel, AFRL

Photonic Materials

Ken Hopkins, AFRL

Computational Materials Science

Dimitris Papaconstantopoulos, NRL

Computational Study of Strongly Correlated Materials

Steve Hellberg, NRL

Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

 

Novel Organic and Organometallic Materials

Len Buckley, NRL

Functional Polymer Research

Matt Bratcher, ARL

Functional Organic Thin Films for Next-Generation Devices

Alberto Pique, NRL

Polymeric Materials

Doug Dudis, WPAFB

Bioderived and Bioinspired Materials

 

Biomimetics and Biosensor Research Within the Air Force Research Laboratory and Other DoD Agencies

Morley Stone, WPAFB

Biomaterials Prospects for the Navy and Marine Corps

Harold Bright, ONR

Materials and Devices: Biology Blurs the Distinction at the Nanoscale

Jeff Byers, NRL

Biologically Derived Structural and Functional Materials: Insight from Nature for Design Principles and Manufacturing Possibilities; and Nanobiotechnology for Chemical and Biological Defense

Robert Campbell, ARL

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

JUNE 26-27, 2001

J. ERIK JONSSON CENTER

WOODS HOLE, MASSACHUSETTS

June 26, 2001

 

Structural and Multifunctional Materials

 

Composite Materials in Systems

Frank Thompson, General Dynamics Land Systems

Metal Matrix Composites

Daniel Miracle, AFRL

Thermal Barrier Coatings

James A. Ruud, GE CR&D

Nondestructive Evaluations (NDE/NDI)

Michael Rooney, APL

Casting Geometrically Engineered Material Systems

Jon Priluck, JamCorp

Energy and Power Materials

 

Batteries and the Battery Industry by the Year 2025: An Industry Perspective on Outlook and Opportunities for DoD

Bob Staniewicz, SAFT America

Fuel Cells

Sossina Haile, California Institute of Technology

Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

 

Organic Magnetics

Arthur Epstein, Ohio State University

Photonic Devices

Richard Ridgway, Battelle

Metal-Organic Catalysts

Bryan Coughlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Bioderived and Bioinspired Materials

 

Review of the BAST Study on Opportunities in Biotechnology for Future Army Applications

Mauro Ferrari, Ohio State University

Foreign Developments in Biotechnology

Anna Pawul, Department of Defense

Applications of Structural Biopolymers in Defense and Industrial Systems

David Kaplan, Tufts University

Medical/Surgical Biomaterials and Devices

Steven Arnold, Johnson and Johnson

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

Human Performance Enhancements

Erik Viirre, University of California, San Diego

June 27, 2001

 

Structural and Multifunctional Materials

 

Health Monitoring

Richard Claus, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Polymeric Materials

Richard Farris, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Multiscale Materials

Priya Vashishta, Louisiana State University

Computational Materials Science

Michael Baskes, LANL

Energy and Power Materials

 

Nanomaterials Science for Batteries and Other Power Sources

Rich Carlin, ONR

Energy and Power Sources for Future Army (and DoD) Applications

Bob Hamlen, Army CECOM

Fuel Cells

Al Tucker, ONR

Electronic and Photonic Materials

 

Sensors

Mike Wazenski, Northrop Grumman

Ferroelectric/Piezoelectric Materials University

Amar Bhalla, Pennsylvania State

Microsystems

Don Cook, Sandia National Laboratories

Nanoelectronics

Charles Lieber, Harvard University

Communications/Wireless Systems

David Eaglesham, Lucent Technologies

Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

 

Organic Superconduction

Ananth Dodabalapur, Lucent Technologies

Actuators

Ray Baughman, Honeywell

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

OCTOBER 10-12, 2001

ARNOLD AND MABEL BECKMAN CENTER

IRVINE, CALIFORNIA

October 10, 2001

 

Structural and Multifunctional Materials

 

Nanostructured Materials

Julia Weertman, Northwestern University

Structural Amorphous Metals and Composites

William Johnson, California Institute of Technology

Ceramic Matrix Composites

Frank Zok, University of California, Santa Barbara

Manufacturing Ceramic Composites

Andy Szweda, COI Ceramics, Inc.

Structures/Joining

Bryan Dods, Boeing

Energy and Power Materials

 

Fuel Cells

Mark Williams, NETL

Micro Chemical and Thermal Systems (MicroCATS)

Robert Wegeng, PNNL

Capacitors

Chenniah Nanjudiah, Maxwell Laboratories

Fuels Processing

Rajeev Gautam, UOP

Future of Superconductors

Paul Grant, EPRI

Nanoenergetics

Rob Dye and H.E. Rogers, Technanogy

Electronic and Photonic Materials

 

Photonics/Laser Materials

David Hagan, University of Central Florida

Infrared/Radar Materials/Technologies

Brian Pierce, Raytheon

Thermoelectric Materials

Tim Hogan, Michigan State University

High-Temperature, High-Power Electronic Materials

Umesh Misra, University of California, Santa Barbara

Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

 

Optically Active Polymers

Luping Yu, University of Chicago

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

Organic Display Materials

Norman Bardsley, United States Display Consortium

Membranes

William Koros, University of Texas-Austin

Bioderived and Bioinspired Materials

 

Bioderived and Bioinspired Materials—Overview

Ilhan Aksay, Princeton University

Bioderived and Bioinspired Functional Materials

Mark Reed, Yale University

Engineering Cell/Material Interfaces

Carolyn Bertozzi, University of California, Berkeley

Memory Implants for Human Performance

Theodore Berger, University of Southern California

Computational Theory and Modeling

Alan Windle, University of Cambridge

October 11, 2001

 

Structural and Multifunctional Materials

 

Polymer/Nanotube Composites

Larry Drzal, Michigan State University

Energy and Power Materials

 

Power Systems (Marine Fuel Cells)

John Sofia, NAVSSES

Microelectromechanical Systems

William Tang, DARPA

Computational Materials Science as It Relates to Energy/Power

Brian Wirth, LLNL

Electronic and Photonic Materials

 

Magnetic Materials

Ivan Schuller, University of California, San Diego

October 12, 2001

 

Electronic and Photonic Materials

 

Packaging Materials

Charles Bauer, TechLead Corp

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×

Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

 

Photovoltaics

Yang Yang, University of California, Los Angeles

JANUARY 29, 2002

NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

WASHINGTON, D.C.

January 29, 2002

 

Panel on Bioderived and Bioinspired Materials

Michael Jaffe

Panel on Functional Organic and Hybrid Materials

Frank Karasz

Panel on Electronic and Photonic Materials

Julia Phillips

Panel on Energy and Power Materials

James Baskerville

Panel on Structural and Multifunctional Materials

Harry Lipsitt

DoD Vision and System Needs—Update

Andrew Marshall, OSD

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 227
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 228
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 229
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 230
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 231
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 232
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 233
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 234
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 235
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Meeting Speakers." National Research Council. 2003. Materials Research to Meet 21st-Century Defense Needs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10631.
×
Page 236
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In order to achieve the revolutionary new defense capabilities offered by materials science and engineering, innovative management to reduce the risks associated with translating research results will be needed along with the R&D. While payoff is expected to be high from the promising areas of materials research, many of the benefits are likely to be evolutionary. Nevertheless, failure to invest in more speculative areas of research could lead to undesired technological surprises. Basic research in physics, chemistry, biology, and materials science will provide the seeds for potentially revolutionary technologies later in the 21st century.

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