Transcript Document

The Materials Computation Center, University of Illinois
Duane Johnson and Richard Martin (PIs), NSF DMR-03-25939 • www.mcc.uiuc.edu
Summer School on
Computational Materials Science
Providing education on frontier research techniques
The two-week Summer School offers lectures by
premier scientists and provides hands-on computer
lab experience with key software, often led by the
software developers themselves.
Within the framework of selecting appropriate and
diverse participants, the school is focused on 1)
students and faculty at smaller state institutions,
and 2) women and under-represented minorites.
Thanks for letting my graduate student attend
the summer school. He is just fantastically excited...
I take it from conversations with him that the school
was extremely helpful for his work. As a smaller
university, UMBC simply cannot always provide
graduate-level courses in theory, and therefore the
2006 summer school was just needed.
Dr. Susan K. Gregurick, Assistant Professor
University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Chemistry
WHY IT MATTERS: The Summer Schools are a
centralized place for learning new methods,
speaking one-on-one with experts, and
identifying potential collaborators. On a follow-up
survey, 80% of respondents said they expect to
have science-related discussions with another
participant or instructor in the future.
By distributing knowledge from large institutions
to other universities, the School supplements the
educational experience at smaller institutions and
keeps a larger number of young researchers
competitive. Scientists who cannot attend due to
timing or space constraints can access the
website’s presentation slides, input/output files,
and video lectures.
The Materials Computation Center, University of Illinois
Duane Johnson and Richard Martin (PIs), NSF DMR-03-25939 • www.mcc.uiuc.edu
Diverse backgrounds enrich school experience
Participants indicate that “meeting potential collaborators”
is among the top benefits of attending summer schools.
The School Committee chose participants to achieve
variety and balance between:
• Students, postdoctoral researchers, and faculty
• Small and large schools
• Academic environments and national research labs
• Domestic and international applicants
• Different research groups
• Primary area of study (chemistry and physics)
Presentations by faculty participants
Two junior faculty participants gave invited talks about the
teaching and research environments at their home institutions,
the University of Jordan and Prairie View A&M University.
Education and Research in Jordan, Challenges & Outlook
(B. Hamad, .ppt)
Nano-scale Modeling with Undergraduates
(H. Fan, .pdf)
Dr. Bothina Hamad
University of Jordan
Department of Physics
Dr. Huajun Fan
Prairie View A&M University
Department of Chemistry
The Materials Computation Center, University of Illinois
Duane Johnson and Richard Martin (PIs), NSF DMR-03-25939 • www.mcc.uiuc.edu
TOPIC & LOCATION
The Summer School covered ab initio Molecular Dynamics
Simulation Methods in Chemistry: the use and
programming of high-performance computing, electronic
structure calculations, and structural optimization. The
Summer Schools are held at University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign campus.
This year’s School took place
July 31–August 11, 2006.
SPONSORS
• National Science Foundation
• Materials Computation Center, UIUC
• National Center for Supercomputing Applications,
UIUC
• Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory, UIUC
• Computational Science and Engineering Program,
UIUC
The National Center for Supercomputing Applications
provided the School with computing access, videography
support, and meeting space (computer labs and lecture
hall).
WEBSITE
http://www.mcc.uiuc.edu/summerschool/2006/
INSTRUCTORS
• Stefano Baroni, Sissa Trieste
• Brett Bode, Iowa State University
• Victor Batista, Yale University
• Thom Dunning, UIUC
• Marcus Elstner, University of Heidelberg
• Dave Ennis, Ohio Supercomputer Center
• Guido Fratesi, University of Milan
• Paolo Giannozzi, Scuola Normale Superiore
• Srinivasan Iyengar, Indiana University
• Axel Kohlmeyer, University of Pennsylvania
• Glenn Martyna, IBM
• Spiridoula Matsika, Temple University
• Nicola Marzari, MIT
• Lubos Mitas, North Carolina State University
• Jason Quenneville, Los Alamos National Lab
• Alejandro Strachan, Purdue University
ORGANIZERS
• AIMD: T. Martínez, D. Ceperley, R. Martin, and
D. Johnson (UIUC)
• Quantum–ESPRESSO: N. Marzari (MIT) and
P. Giannozzi (Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, and
DEMOCRITOS, Trieste)
• High-Performance Computing: J. Kim (UIUC)