Professor T. W. Clyne
T. W. Clyne, Ph.D. is
Head of the Composites & Coatings Group and
Professor in Mechanics of Materials,
Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy, University of
Cambridge.
After completing his first degree and Ph.D. (Solidification Cracking of
Aluminium Alloys) at the Department of Materials Science and
Metallurgy, Bill took up a lectureship in Brazil
(University of Campinas), followed by further academic posts in
Switzerland (EPFL) and the UK (Surrey), before returning to Cambridge in
1985. His current post is Professor of Mechanics of
Materials.
Bill was
appointed Director of the Gordon Laboratory in 1998, when it was set up
by DERA. He’s also a Fellow of Downing College, where he has until
recently been Director of Studies and Admissions Tutor. In the latter
capacity, he instigated an ongoing Target Schools Initiative aimed at
Comprehensives in the South-West of England. (He was brought up in
Cornwall.)
The basic theme of his research over the past dozen or so years has been
study of the thermo-mechanical behaviour of a wide range of composite
systems, including metal-based composite materials, layered systems,
sandwich sheets, metallic foams, and certain types of surface coating.
This work has an emphasis on processing aspects and also on the
development of analytical and numerical models — both for process
simulation and for prediction of thermo-mechanical
performance.
Current
activities include studies of residual stresses and interfacial
adhesion, development of customized numerical process models, and
investigation of the failure characteristics of various composite
materials and coating systems. There is also ongoing work on thermal
barrier coatings and other systems for protection against various
extreme environments. Recent innovations include the development of
actuators based on magnetic and shape memory materials, with potential
applications in the biomedical field.
Bill coauthored
An Introduction to Composite Materials,
An Introduction to Metal Matrix Composites,
A Sintering Model for Plasma-Sprayed Zirconia TBCs Part II: Coatings
Bonded to a Rigid Substrate,
Stainless Steel Sandwich Sheets with Fibrous Metal Cores, and
Ferrous Fibre Network Materials for Jet Noise Reduction in
Aeroengines
Part I: Acoustic Effects,
edited
Interfacial Effects in Particulate, Fibrous, and Layered Composite
Materials, and coedited
Metal Matrix Composites and Metallic Foams.