CHEM-E2205 - Materials for a World in Transition D, Lecture, 12.1.2022-18.2.2022
This course space end date is set to 18.02.2022 Search Courses: CHEM-E2205
Topic outline
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Link to class on 18.2.2022: https://aalto.zoom.us/j/63947469293
Teaching in 2022
Welcome to the 2022 edition of the Material for a World in Transition course. We are still in the midst of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic so, regrettably, we will once again have to conduct the course in online mode. Despite this, I very much hope that you will find the course engaging and inspiring!
Enrollment
The course is limited to a maximum of 60 participants. The course is mandatory for students of Creative Sustainability. If fewer than 60 places are taken by students on the Creative Sustainability program, the remaining places will be allocated to students from other programs. These students will be selected on the basis of their backgrounds, to ensure that we are able to create multidisciplinary teams for group working.
About the course
As the song by Madonna goes, we are “living in a material world” – literally! Our culture and economy is intimately linked to the transformation of materials into products for our use – for construction, for transportation and for the host of other artefacts deemed necessary by current society. With our use of raw materials, and the energy used in their transformation, we are now irrevocably changing our environment, to such an extent that a new geological epoch has been espoused – the Anthropocene.
Historically, we learned to use the natural materials around us, or those derived from the animals hunted for food - stone, wood, vegetable fibers, leather, bone, horn, sinew etc. Later, we learned to produce metals from ores, and in the past century or so to synthesize polymers and resins from fossil oil. Through the scientific study of materials, we have become adept at creating new materials with radically new properties – properties never before seen, nor even dreamed of.
Despite our undoubted ingenuity at developing new materials and producing new products from them, we still take little account of the impact that our materials’ use has on the environment and, in many cases, on our fellow humans. This paradigm needs to change. Recognizing this, new policy, at national and EU level has been developed, embodied in the concepts of the Circular Economy and the Bioeconomy, the aim of which is to change the current situation to a (more) sustainable use of materials. Even with these intentions, a gulf remains between the status quo and a sustainable materials economy.
In this course, we will explore the nexus between materials and sustainability, adopting a systems thinking approach to materials cycles. We will look at how the use of material and the choices we make in their selection, and the design of materials and products, affect sustainability. We will look at how we can improve resource efficiency and will explore the limits to this. We will look at material flows and the stakeholders involved in often highly complex value chains.
Schedule:
Week #
Date
Time
Topic
Teacher
2
12.1
10-12
Introduction: Living in the material world
Mark & Anna
14.1
10-12
Materials and their properties
Mark & Anna
3
19.1
10-12
Materials, flows and systems
Mark & Anna
21.1
10-12
Impacts and strategies
Mark & Anna
4
26.1
10-12
The ‘S’ Word
Prof. Callum Hill
28.1
10-12
Thermodynamics
Prof. Callum Hill
5
2.2
10-12
Materials and systems thinking
Prof. Deniz Koca
4.2
10-12
Systems modelling
Prof. Deniz Koca
6
9.2
10-12
Metals, flows and systems
Anna
11.2
10-12
Resource efficiency & circular economy
Mark
7
16.2
10-12
Material properties and the circular- and bio-economies
Anna and Mark
18.2
10-12
Materials and the bioeconomy
Mark