Sidney Yip

Professor Emeritus

Professional Focus: 

  • Advanced computation
  • Fission
  • Materials Science/Engineering
  • Radiation

DLC: 

Education
Ph.D., Nuclear Engineering, Univ. Michigan, 1962.
M.S., Nuclear Engineering, Univ. Michigan, 1959.
B.S., Mechanical Engineering, Univ. Michigan, 1958.
 

Research
Corrosion, creep and fracture are aging and degradation phenomena of longstanding concern in materials research which are further exacerbated in the presence of radiation damage. They represent a class of technologically important problems for which the connection between microscale studies and macroscale behavior remains poorly understood. Emerging concepts based on energy landscape modeling, coarse graining by transition state theory, and biased sampling of reaction pathways are making it possible to probe the mechanisms controlling macro-scale deformation and flow observed in experiments. We are particularly interested in the time- and stress-dependent manifestations of avalanche, intermittency, and localization behavior in systems far from equilibrium, and regard them as problems defining the frontiers of mesoscale modeling and simulation.