m3c industrial research school
Microstructure, Mechanical properties, Manufacturing processes, and Components
m3c is an industrial doctoral (PhD) research school. The consortium comprises materials scientists from three Swedish universities: the project coordinator and applicant Karlstad University, Jönköping University, and University of Gävle, as well as seven leading industrial partners. For more than two decades, the participating universities have built strong research profiles in co-production with industrial partners, including courses in different and complementing specialization areas.
m3c contributes to the development of advanced alloys by enhancing a fundamental understanding of how different types of defects evolve and how they influence performance. The term defect structure is central to the m3c graduate school. It is defined as a flaw in a perfectly manufactured alloy or component (i.e. non-metal inclusion in steels and intermetallic inclusion in stainless steel) or an imperfection that develops as a result of the in-service condition (i.e. wear patterns in sliding contact, and erosion structures and thermal softening that arise in die casting due to the interaction between the molten aluminium and the tool steel of the mould). Defect structures are often life-limiting factors for the in-service lifetime of advanced alloys.
The multidisciplinary research topic is focused on four topics: T1 Microstructure characterization, T2 Mechanical properties (including fatigue and tribology), T3 Manufacturing processes (including AM, die casting and heat treatment), and T4 Components (including material design and simulation).
Read more here: M3C, Industriforskarskola