The ICG Summer School 2015, taking place in Montpellier, France, 6-10 July 2015, will be organized as two parallel streams. One will be based on glass science, focused more on academic topics, and the second will discuss glass surface and thin film technologies. The glass science workshop will overview key fundamentals in glass science.
The International Commission on Glass (ICG) is organizing the 7th Summer School in Montpellier, France, 6-10 July 2015. The Summer School 2015 will be organized as two parallel streams, one following a glass science theme, focused more on academic topics, and the second looking at glass surface and thin film technologies both from an industrial and academic perspective. The glass science workshop will overview key fundamentals in glass science with an emphasis on structure-property relationships and transport phenomena. Each day will start with a talk on available measurement/simulation methodologies and their contribution to our understanding of glass structure and transport processes, both on different length scales and for a broad spectrum of inorganic glass-forming systems. These will be complemented by talks on properties and their structural dependence e.g. optical behaviour, viscosity and ageing, nucleation and crystallisation but also on chemical durability and corrosion. The second stream will present in depth the most relevant analytical techniques for characterizing surfaces and thin films, different surface modification technologies and thin film deposition methods but also modern glass applications based on these technologies. A few fundamental lectures will include both streams. Participants can also choose freely which stream to attend.
The lectures will be given by world leading experts in their fields. A significant aspect of the workshop will be student-centred projects that encourage interactive learning and help participants to develop their understanding by applying what they know to specific issues.
The course is designed for new PhD students or for young researchers who have recently started research in the glass industry.
Cost will be EUR 700 including coffee, lunches, opening reception and a Thursday evening dinner, but with a discount of EUR 300 for bona fide students. Conveniently situated student accommodation including breakfast, at EUR 220 (prepaid) is also available. Participants will be limited to 50.
A more complete programme will appear soon on the ICG web site (www.icglass.org).