From January 18th to January 20th, 2010, Prof. Toshimori Sekine of the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan visited the university's State Key Laboratory of Explosive Science and Technology at the invitation of Prof. Chen Pengwan and made a related shock wave. A series of academic reports on chemical and shock wave materials, including "Shock wave and the basis for its materials application", "Shock synthesis and exploration in the system Si3N4-AlN-SiO2-Al2O3," and "Shock synthesis of organic materials from inorganic Materials". Professor Zhang Qingming, the director of the State Key Laboratory of Explosive Science and Technology, and more than 30 teachers and students from relevant professional schools participated in the report.
During the visit, Prof. Toshimori Sekine visited the State Key Laboratory of Explosive Science and Technology. He also had special discussions with the teachers and students of key laboratories on the development and research hotspots of shock wave chemistry and explosive composite materials. He also discussed cooperation and academic research between the two parties in the future. The exchange reached a preliminary consensus.
About Professor Toshimori Sekinee's:
Professor Toshimori Sekine received a master's degree in inorganic chemistry and geochemistry from the Tokyo Institute of Technology (1976) and a Ph.D. (1979). He is currently a Senior Research Fellow at the National Institute for Materials Science in Japan and a Visitee at Tohoku University and Osaka University in Japan. Prof. Toshimori Sekine has achieved important research results in fields such as dynamic high-pressure synthetic materials, material response and impact method research on the origin of life under dynamic pressure conditions. More than 100 academic papers have been published in international journals, including Nature (2 articles), Nature Geoscience (1 article), Adv.Mater., Phys.Rev.Lett., Appl.Phys.Lett., J.Am.Chem. .Soc. and other internationally renowned journals. In 2000, he was awarded the Outstanding Achievement Award of Japan's Ministry of Education, and in 2003 became a member of the American Physical Society.