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Laszlo Takacs

Associate Professor

Ph.D. Eštvšs Lor‡nd University, 1978

Postdoctoral work at Northeastern University

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Contact Information
Room 309, Physics Bldg.
Department of Physics
Univ. Maryland Baltimore County
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250

Phone:

(410) 455-2524

Email:

takacs@umbc.edu


Research Interests

New materials and new methods to prepare them are essential to virtually all aspects of technological development. More powerful computers require high quality semiconductor and magnetic storage media; new high temperature alloys and ceramics are the key to increase the efficiency of car and airplane engines. Many desirable properties are achieved by the application of metastable materials like metallic glasses and nanocrystalline materials.

Our current research interest is the application of high energy ball milling, a process called mechanical alloying or mechanochemical synthesis, to the preparation of novel materials. The unique feature of this process is that grain refinement, alloying, and chemical reactions take place at room temperature under far-from-equilibrium conditions. Investigations are under way to prepare nanocomposites for structural and magnetic applications. Typical systems consist of 10 nm iron particles in alumina or TaC particles in a TaNi alloy matrix.

We are also developing models to describe the mechanism of the ball milling process. This is a challenging task due to the complex combination of mechanical, chemical, thermal, and transport processes. We are especially interested in highly exothermic reactions where ball milling can initiate a self propagating thermal reaction. Mechanochemical reactions between a metal oxide and a more reactive metal and combination reactions to form carbides, borides, and sulfides are investigated. Our main experimental methods are X-ray diffraction, thermal measurements, and magnetic characterization.

Selected Publications

A. Toraoyan and L. Takacs, “Mechanochemical Reactions at the Interface Between a Metal Plate and Oxide Powders,” Journal of Materials Science 39 (2004) 5491-5496.

L. Takacs, “M. Carey Lea, the Father of Mechanochemistry,” Bulletin of the History of Chemistry 28 (2003) 26-34.

L. Takacs, “Self-Sustaining Reactions Induced by Ball Milling,” Progress in Materials Science 47 (2002) 355-414.

A. Bakhshai, V. Soika, M. A. Susol, and L. Takacs, “Mechanochemical Reactions in the Sn-Zn-S System: Further Studies,” Journal of Solid State Chemistry 153 (2000) 371-380.

L. Takacs, R. C. Reno, and M. Pardavi-Horvath, "Mechanochemical Transformations in the Zn-Magnetite System," Hyperfine Interactions 112 (1998) 247-250.


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