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Angus Paul Wilkinson

Professor

School of Chemistry and Biochemistry School of Materials Science and Engineering

Prof. Wilkinson is an internationally recognized expert in the design and characterization of low and negative thermal expansion oxides and fluorides. He is perhaps best known for the discovery of negative thermal expansion over a very wide temperature range in ScF3 and the subsequent development of a family of fluorides based on the ReO3 structure type. Low thermal expansion materials provide for dimensional stability in the phase of temperature change and good thermal shock resistance, and negative thermal expansion materials can be used to compensate for the normal expansion of other components. His group extensive employs non-ambient (low T, high T and high pressure) X-ray and neutron diffraction, and total scattering, methods to understand structure property relationships in materials. He has recently extended his activities to include the synthesis and study of helium containing solids such as He2CaZrF6 and HeScF3. While these compositions are exotic, helium trapped in solids is directly relevant to the nuclear powder industry where irradiation leads to embedded helium atoms which can migrate, form bubbles and lead to component failure.

1996 – NSF CAREER Award
1996 – Sigma Xi Award for Outstanding Research by a Junior Faculty Member

Chair, International Union of Crystallography’s Commission on Powder Diffraction
Scientific Advisory Board Member, International Symposium on Negative Thermal Expansion (ISNTE)

People

Angus Paul Wilkinson

Professor
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry School of Materials Science and Engineering

Degrees

BA in Chemistry, Oxford University, U.K. DPhil in Chemistry, Oxford University, U.K.

Honors & Awards

1996 – NSF CAREER Award
1996 – Sigma Xi Award for Outstanding Research by a Junior Faculty Member

Chair, International Union of Crystallography’s Commission on Powder Diffraction
Scientific Advisory Board Member, International Symposium on Negative Thermal Expansion (ISNTE)

Bio

Prof. Wilkinson is an internationally recognized expert in the design and characterization of low and negative thermal expansion oxides and fluorides. He is perhaps best known for the discovery of negative thermal expansion over a very wide temperature range in ScF3 and the subsequent development of a family of fluorides based on the ReO3 structure type. Low thermal expansion materials provide for dimensional stability in the phase of temperature change and good thermal shock resistance, and negative thermal expansion materials can be used to compensate for the normal expansion of other components. His group extensive employs non-ambient (low T, high T and high pressure) X-ray and neutron diffraction, and total scattering, methods to understand structure property relationships in materials. He has recently extended his activities to include the synthesis and study of helium containing solids such as He2CaZrF6 and HeScF3. While these compositions are exotic, helium trapped in solids is directly relevant to the nuclear powder industry where irradiation leads to embedded helium atoms which can migrate, form bubbles and lead to component failure.

Angus Paul Wilkinson

Professor
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry School of Materials Science and Engineering

Degrees

BA in Chemistry, Oxford University, U.K. DPhil in Chemistry, Oxford University, U.K.

Honors & Awards

1996 – NSF CAREER Award
1996 – Sigma Xi Award for Outstanding Research by a Junior Faculty Member

Chair, International Union of Crystallography’s Commission on Powder Diffraction
Scientific Advisory Board Member, International Symposium on Negative Thermal Expansion (ISNTE)

Bio

Prof. Wilkinson is an internationally recognized expert in the design and characterization of low and negative thermal expansion oxides and fluorides. He is perhaps best known for the discovery of negative thermal expansion over a very wide temperature range in ScF3 and the subsequent development of a family of fluorides based on the ReO3 structure type. Low thermal expansion materials provide for dimensional stability in the phase of temperature change and good thermal shock resistance, and negative thermal expansion materials can be used to compensate for the normal expansion of other components. His group extensive employs non-ambient (low T, high T and high pressure) X-ray and neutron diffraction, and total scattering, methods to understand structure property relationships in materials. He has recently extended his activities to include the synthesis and study of helium containing solids such as He2CaZrF6 and HeScF3. While these compositions are exotic, helium trapped in solids is directly relevant to the nuclear powder industry where irradiation leads to embedded helium atoms which can migrate, form bubbles and lead to component failure.