Christian Ludwig2005 - today: Adjunct Professor at EPFL in the field of Solid Waste Treatment and head of the Chemical Processes and Materials research group (CPM) at Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI). Joint EPFL-PSI Professorship on Solid Waste Treatment. 2000 - today: Head, Group of Chemical Processes and Materials (CPM) at Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI). In 2009 the LEM unit was closed and the CPM group is now affiliated to the Bioenergy and Catalysis Laboratory (LBK) of the Energy and Environment Research Division (ENE). Since June 2002 permanent position ("tenure"). 1997 - 1999: Senior Scientist. Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI), General Energy Research Department, Element Cycles Section. 1995 - 1997: Research Fellow. Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology (EAWAG), Department of Resource and Waste Management. 1993 - 1995: Post-doc Fellow. University of California Davis, Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources (LAWR). 1990 - 1993: PhD Student. University of Berne, Department of Inorganic, Analytical, and Physical Chemistry. 1989 - 1990: Master Student. University of Berne, Department of Inorganic, Analytical, and Physical Chemistry.
Michel RappazAprès un doctorat en physique du solide (1978) de l’Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), un post-doc à Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Michel Rappaz rejoint l’Institut des matériaux de l’EPFL en 1981. Après un passage de deux ans dans un bureau d’ingénieurs, il revient à l’EPFL en 1984 où il est nommé Professeur titulaire en 1990, puis Professeur ordinaire en 2003. Après sa retraite de l’EPFL en 2015, il est actuellement Professeur émérite et consultant indépendant auprès de divers centres de recherche et industries.
Ses principaux centres d’intérêt sont les transformations de phase et la solidification, en particulier le couplage des aspects macroscopiques de transferts de chaleur et de masse à l’échelle des procédés avec les aspects microscopiques de germination-croissance des microstructures et des défauts. Parmi ses diverses réalisations, on peut mentionner le développement d’Automates Cellulaires couplés avec la méthode d’Eléments Finis (modèle CAFE) pour la prédiction des structures de grains en solidification, le développement de modèles granulaires pour la fissuration à chaud, l’application de la méthode de champ de phase pour la compréhension de diverses microstructures, la découverte de la germination assistée dans certains alliages par des phases quasicrystallines, ainsi que de nombreuses études touchant aussi bien les aspects fondamentaux de formation des structures que des aspects plus appliqués des procédés.
Certains modèles développés dans son laboratoire ont été commercialisés par une spin-off fondée en 1991 (Calcom SA), faisant partie actuellement du groupe français ESI. Michel Rappaz a initié en 1992 un cours annuel de formation continue en solidification, suivi à ce jour par plus de 900 participants venant d’une quarantaine de pays. Il collabore actuellement avec une autre spin-off du laboratoire fondée en 2014, Novamet SàrL.
Michel Rappaz a reçu de nombreux prix et distinctions, en particulier le prix Mathewson de co-auteur (1994) et auteur (1997) de l’American Mineral, Metals and Materials Society (TMS), le prix de la fondation Koerber avec les Profs Y. Bréchet et M. Asbby (1996), la médaille Sainte-Claire Deville (1996) et la Grande Médaille (2011) de la Société Française des Matériaux (SF2M), le prix Bruce Chalmers de la TMS (2002), le prix Mc Donald Memorial Lecture du Canada (2005), la médaille d’or de la Société Européenne des Matériaux (FEMS, 2013) et le prix Brimacombe de la TMS (2015). Il fait partie des “Highly-Cited Authors” de ISI, il est fellow des sociétés ASM, IOP et TMS, et a écrit plus de 200 publications et deux livres.
Roland LogéRoland Logé is an associate professor at EPFL, with a primary affiliation to the Materials Institute, and a secondary affiliation to the Microengineering Institute.
After graduating in 1994 at UCL (Belgium) in Materials Engineering, he earned a Master of Science in Mechanics in 1995, at UCSB Santa Barbara (USA). He received his PhD at Mines Paristech-CEMEF (France) in 1999, where he specialized in metal forming and associated microstructure evolutions. After a postdoc at Cornell University (USA) between 1999 and 2001, he entered CNRS in France.
In 2008, he was awarded the ALCAN prize from the French Academy of Sciences, together with Yvan Chastel.
In 2009 he became head of the Metallurgy-Structure-Rheology research group at CEMEF.
In 2011, he launched a “Groupement de Recherche” (GDR), funded by CNRS, networking most of the researchers in France involved in recrystallization and grain growth.
In 2013, he became Research Director at CNRS.
In March 2014 he joined EPFL as the head of the Laboratory of Thermomechanical Metallurgy.
Melanie BlokeschMelanie Blokesch holds a PhD degree from the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich, Germany. After a postdoctoral stay at Stanford University (USA; Department of Microbiology and Immunology) she joined EPFL as a tenure-track Assistant Professor in 2009 and was promoted to Associate Professor (tenured) in 2016. In 2018, Melanie Blokesch was nominated as new member of the the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) National Research Council (starting date: April 2019). Melanie Blokesch is also an elected member of the European Academy of Microbiology (EAM; since 2018) and the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO; since 2019). Among other awards and grants, Melanie Blokesch has been honored with the Prize for Junior Scientists of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina in 2005, an ERC Starting Grant in 2012, the EPFL teaching award "Polysphère" for best teacher in the School of Life Sciences (academic year 2014-2015), the Research Award by the Association for General and Applied Microbiology (VAAM; Germany) in 2015, and an ERC Consolidator Grant in 2016. In 2017, Melanie Blokesch was awarded a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) International Research Scholarship.
Andreas MortensenAndreas Mortensen is currently Professor and Director of the Institute of Materials at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL), where he heads the Laboratory for Mechanical Metallurgy. He joined the faculty of EPFL 1997 after ten years, from 1986 to 1996, as a member of the faculty of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he held the successive titles of ALCOA Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, and Professor. His research is focussed on the processing, microstructural development and mechanical behavior of advanced metallic materials with particular focus on metal matrix composites and metal foams, on infiltration processing and capillarity, and on damage and fracture in metallic materials. He is author or co-author of two monographs, around one hundred and eighty scientific or technical publications and twelve patents. Born in San Francisco in 1957, of dual (Danish and US) nationality, Andreas Mortensen graduated in 1980 from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Paris with a Diplôme dIngénieur Civil, and earned his Ph.D. in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at MIT in 1986. Besides his academic employment, he was a postdoctoral researcher at Nippon Steel during part of 1986, and was invited professor at the Ecole des Mines in Paris during the academic year 1995 to 1996. He is a member of the editorial committee of International Materials Reviews and has co-edited four books. He is a Fellow of ASM, a recipient of the Howe Medal and the Grossman Award of the American Society of Metals, was awarded the Péchiney Prize by the French Academy of Sciences and the Res Metallica Chair from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, received three EPFL teaching awards, is one of ISIs Highly Cited authors for Materials Science since 2002 and was awarded an ERC advanced grant in 2012.
Zhaofu Fei1999, Phd in Chemistry, Braunschweig, Germany,
2002, Lausanne, EPFL, Scientist.