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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JANUARY 9,1996 PSA#1506WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT INSTITUTE FOR MATHEMATICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS
POC Anna Tsao, ARPA/DSO, FAX (703) 696-3999. WORKSHOP ANNOUNCEMENT -
INSTITUTE FOR MATHEMATICS AND ITS APPLICATIONS SPONSORED BY ARPA AND
NSF. The improved design of materials processing equipment and systems
must rely on an integrated ``cycle'' that begins, and ends, with
materials. The first, or ``analytical,'' part of the cycle begins with
the identification of key material needs, followed by process
definition, the development of physical models, and, finally,
(large--scale) simulation, the second, or ``synthetic'' part of the
cycle, proceeds *from* simulation to simplified process models to
model--based optimization and control to selection of sensors and
actuators and, finally, to process innovation and improved product. In
actual practice, the cycle will not be sequential, for example,
control strategies must be considered during initial process
characterization and system design. In these two workshops we will
investigate this materials processing design cycle, with the first and
second workshops focused primarily, though not exclusively, on the
first and second parts of the cycle, respectively. The materials
systems of foremost interest are thin films, however the application of
mathematical techniques from other areas--including domains well
outside materials processing--is an important theme of both workshops,
particularly the second. Speakers and participants will be drawn from
industry, government laboratories, and academia, and will represent a
broad range of physical and mathematical interests. Key issues to be
addressed in the first workshop include the collaborative
*experimental*/mathematical development of appropriate physical models
for thin films and related systems, the reconciliation of disparate
atomistic and continuum time and length scales, the evaluation of
current atomistic and continuum simulation capabilities and
limitations, and the identification of materials processes well--suited
to both stimulate *and* demonstrate the benefits of integrated
modeling, simulation, optimization, control, and sensing. Key issues to
be addressed in the second workshop include the role of large--scale
simulation, both direct and indirect, in system design, optimization,
and control, the identification of the range of variables and
associated models relevant to optimization and feedforward and feedback
control in materials processing systems, and the need for new control,
optimization, and sensing advances for materials processing
applications. MODELING OF FILM GROWTH AND DEPOSITION
PROCESSES-EVOLUTION OF FILM MICROSTRUCTURE AND MORPHOLOGY ORGANIZERS:
MAC BEASLEY, LOUIS AUSLANDER, GEOFFREY MCFADDEN, DAVID SROLOVITZ,
JANUARY 24-26, 1996. The first workshop will focus on three main
issues. The first is the development of physical models of film growth
processes. This includes the identification of the microscopic physics
that determines microstructure, morphology and property evolution in
thin films and the relationship of these to deposition conditions. The
second issue is the extraction of continuum (PDE) level
representations of these physical phenomena. The third theme is the
development of simulation procedures for the film and/or deposition
chamber scale modeling of the growth process. The workshop sessions
will begin with a discussion of the overall need for modeling of film
growth processes and review recent experience in implementation of
physically based modeling of materials processing/film growth in
industry. The next session will focus on the experimental
state-of-the-art and the problems and opportunities in several
different film growth technologies. The following sessions will address
the physical modeling of film growth on increasing time and length
scales. This will include atomic scale, microstructural scale,
continuum level descriptions of thin film structure/property
development and deposition chamber level modeling of the growth
processes. A central issue to be addressed here is the spanning of
these disparate length/time scales and the identification of the
important features that must be extracted at each scale. Next, the
workshop will focus on the mathematical issues central to the practical
computational implementation of the film growth modeling on appropriate
length and time scales and approaches for combining modeling at
different scales where appropriate. The workshop will consist of
invited presentations, extended discussion periods and
cross-disciplinary break-out groups, culminating in a final synthesis
session. OPTIMIZATION AND CONTROL FOR MATERIALS PROCESSING
APPLICATIONS: SIMULATIONS, MODELS, AND STRATEGIES ORGANIZERS: TONY
PATERA, STEPHEN BOYD, FEBRUARY 1-3, 1996. The second workshop will
focus on three issues. The first issue is the need for new methods for
the incorporation of large--scale simulation into the system design
process, from direct insertion of large--scale simulation in
optimization procedures, to the development of static and dynamic
reduced--order models for subsequent optimization and real--time
control. The second issue is the need for a hierarchy of variables and
associated models in the design process, from large--scale system
models for nonlinear optimization, through intermediate models for
feedforward control (recipe generation), to fast, local models for
real--time sensing and control. The third theme is the need for new
control and optimization advances, including methods that blend
real--time feedback control with run-to-run feedback control and
step-to-step feedforward compensation, control system design tools for
materials processing applications that permit, for example, rapid
identification of promising sensor/actuator configurations, and
improved computational algorithms for open--loop process optimization.
The workshop sessions will include case studies of current industrial
practice in equipment and process design, case studies of current
commercial and research simulation successes in materials processing
and related applications, techniques for optimization and control based
on partial--differential--equation state descriptions, methods for the
development of static and dynamic reduced--order models from
large--scale simulation, case studies of applications of control theory
to real materials processing systems, techniques for model--based
control and optimization, system identification and statistical
approaches in materials processing applications, and innovative sensing
strategies and technologies. The workshop sessions will consist of
invited presentations, discussions, topical and cross-disciplinary
break--out groups, and closing summary and synthesis sessions.
Presentations will address the workshop themes through cases studies,
descriptions of relevant current research, or reviews. There will be a
meal fee of $30 for each workshop. Only limited seating is available,
so advance registration for these workshops is required by January 19
on a first-come, first-serve basis. Interested parties may be limited
to participation of one individual per organization or research group.
Prospective attendees should contact the IMA (phone: 612-624-6066,
email: staff@ima.umn.edu) for registration materials and further
details. This announcement and further details, as they become
available, can be found at the following WWW sites: http://www.arpa.mil
and http://www.ima.umn.edu. Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0180 19960108\SP-0001.MSC)
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