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UT, CNS support camp that lets students study space shuttle debris

Posted at 10:28 am June 4, 2015
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Shuttle Debris at UT, CNS, ASM Camp

CNS Y-12’s Steve Dekanich holds up a piece of the remains of the space shuttle Columbia during a materials science camp session on Monday. (Submitted photo)

 

KNOXVILLE—An ASM International Materials Camp supported by the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and scientists at CNS Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge is giving local students the chance to study debris from the space shuttle Columbia, with an eye on improving materials used in space flight.

“This is a great opportunity for local kids to get involved with materials science and see how it affects a lot of different disciplines,” said Steve Dekanich, senior metallurgist at CNS Y-12 and the leader of this year’s camp. “People can tend to focus on the really specialized things that materials science studies, but the reality is that it plays a part in many things that people don’t realize, from energy to design.”

Dekanich recalled how he met NASA’s Steve McDanels at a conference in Hawaii, with the two hitting it off immediately.

McDanels, who heads up NASA’s materials science division at Kennedy Space Center, has spent years doing studies and analysis for the agency, including work related to the shuttles, the International Space Station, and various hardware. He offered Dekanich the chance to have his campers study NASA debris for the first time in 2006, with the offer being gladly accepted. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Federal, Front Page News, Government, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: ASM International, ASM International Materials Camp, Barry Wilmore, camp, CNS, Columbia, Jim Haynes, Jimmy G. Cheek, materials science, NASA, NASA debris, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, space shuttle, space shuttle debris, Steve Dekanich, Steve McDanels, University of Tennessee, UT, Y-12 National Security Complex

The leg bone is connected to the hip prosthesis: Students analyze artificial implants

Posted at 4:51 pm June 8, 2013
By Y-12 National Security Complex Leave a Comment

ASM Materials Camp Lab Instrument

Student Hunter Stombaugh loads a material sample into the Saphir 550.3, a laboratory instrument used to grind and polish samples before placing them in an electron microscope for analysis. (Submitted photos)

Fifteen high school students and one college freshman recently got up close and personal with lab equipment worth nearly a half-million dollars at the ASM International Materials Camp. During the weeklong camp, students performed failure analyses on prosthetic implants including a hip prosthesis, pelvic clamps, a tibial nail, and tibial component. An area surgeon provided the sterilized implants, along with X-rays showing the implants before they were removed from patients.

The ASM Materials Camp is organized and sponsored by Y-12 National Security Complex, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tech 20/20, and the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Steve Dekanich, an engineer in B&W Y-12’s Quality Assurance, is the camp co-chairman. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, K-12, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: artificial implants, ASM International Materials Camp, B&W Y-12, failure analyses, hot mounting press, Hunter Stombaugh, Justin Zanoni, mobile metallography lab, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, optical microscope, precision cut off saw, prosthetic implants, scanning electron microscope, specimen grinder polisher, Steve Dekanich, Tech 20/20, University of Tennessee, Y-12 National Security Complex

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