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Dive into the research topics where Navid Kazem is active.

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Featured researches published by Navid Kazem.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Stretchable, High-k Dielectric Elastomers through Liquid-Metal Inclusions

Michael D. Bartlett; Andrew Fassler; Navid Kazem; Eric J. Markvicka; Pratiti Mandal; Carmel Majidi

An all-soft-matter composite with exceptional electro-elasto properties is demonstrated by embedding liquid-metal inclusions in an elastomer matrix. This material exhibits a unique combination of high dielectric constant, low stiffness, and large strain limit (ca. 600% strain). The elasticity, electrostatics, and electromechanical coupling of the composite are investigated, and strong agreement with predictions from effective medium theory is found.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

High thermal conductivity in soft elastomers with elongated liquid metal inclusions

Michael D. Bartlett; Navid Kazem; Matthew J. Powell-Palm; Xiaonan Huang; Wenhuan Sun; Jonathan A. Malen; Carmel Majidi

Significance Efficient thermal transport is critical for applications ranging from electronics and energy to advanced manufacturing and transportation; it is essential in emerging domains like wearable computing and soft robotics, which require thermally conductive materials that are also soft and stretchable. However, heat transport within soft materials is limited by the dynamics of phonon transport, which results in a trade-off between thermal conductivity and compliance. We overcome this by engineering an elastomer composite embedded with elongated inclusions of liquid metal (LM) that function as thermally conductive pathways. These composites exhibit an extraordinary combination of low stiffness (<100 kPa), high strain limit (>600%), and metal-like thermal conductivity (up to 9.8 W⋅m−1⋅K−1) that far exceeds any other soft materials. Soft dielectric materials typically exhibit poor heat transfer properties due to the dynamics of phonon transport, which constrain thermal conductivity (k) to decrease monotonically with decreasing elastic modulus (E). This thermal−mechanical trade-off is limiting for wearable computing, soft robotics, and other emerging applications that require materials with both high thermal conductivity and low mechanical stiffness. Here, we overcome this constraint with an electrically insulating composite that exhibits an unprecedented combination of metal-like thermal conductivity, an elastic compliance similar to soft biological tissue (Young’s modulus < 100 kPa), and the capability to undergo extreme deformations (>600% strain). By incorporating liquid metal (LM) microdroplets into a soft elastomer, we achieve a ∼25× increase in thermal conductivity (4.7 ± 0.2 W⋅m−1⋅K−1) over the base polymer (0.20 ± 0.01 W⋅m−1·K−1) under stress-free conditions and a ∼50× increase (9.8 ± 0.8 W⋅m−1·K−1) when strained. This exceptional combination of thermal and mechanical properties is enabled by a unique thermal−mechanical coupling that exploits the deformability of the LM inclusions to create thermally conductive pathways in situ. Moreover, these materials offer possibilities for passive heat exchange in stretchable electronics and bioinspired robotics, which we demonstrate through the rapid heat dissipation of an elastomer-mounted extreme high-power LED lamp and a swimming soft robot.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Soft Multifunctional Composites and Emulsions with Liquid Metals

Navid Kazem; Tess Hellebrekers; Carmel Majidi

Binary mixtures of liquid metal (LM) or low-melting-point alloy (LMPA) in an elastomeric or fluidic carrier medium can exhibit unique combinations of electrical, thermal, and mechanical properties. This emerging class of soft multifunctional composites have potential applications in wearable computing, bio-inspired robotics, and shape-programmable architectures. The dispersion phase can range from dilute droplets to connected networks that support electrical conductivity. In contrast to deterministically patterned LM microfluidics, LMPA- and LM-embedded elastomer (LMEE) composites are statistically homogenous and exhibit effective bulk properties. Eutectic Ga-In (EGaIn) and Ga-In-Sn (Galinstan) alloys are typically used due to their high conductivity, low viscosity, negligible nontoxicity, and ability to wet to nonmetallic materials. Because they are liquid-phase, these alloys can alter the electrical and thermal properties of the composite while preserving the mechanics of the surrounding medium. For composites with LMPA inclusions (e.g., Fields metal, Pb-based solder), mechanical rigidity can be actively tuned with external heating or electrical activation. This progress report, reviews recent experimental and theoretical studies of this emerging class of soft material architectures and identifies current technical challenges and opportunities for further advancement.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Liquid Metals: Stretchable, High-k Dielectric Elastomers through Liquid-Metal Inclusions (Adv. Mater. 19/2016).

Michael D. Bartlett; Andrew Fassler; Navid Kazem; Eric J. Markvicka; Pratiti Mandal; Carmel Majidi

An all-soft-matter composite consisting of liquid metal microdroplets embedded in a soft elastomer matrix is presented by C. Majidi and co-workers on page 3726. This composite exhibits a high dielectric constant while maintaining exceptional elasticity and compliance. The image shows the composites microstructure captured by 3D X-ray imaging using a nano-computed tomographic scanner.


Advanced Materials | 2018

Extreme Toughening of Soft Materials with Liquid Metal

Navid Kazem; Michael D. Bartlett; Carmel Majidi

Soft and tough materials are critical for engineering applications in medical devices, stretchable and wearable electronics, and soft robotics. Toughness in synthetic materials is mostly accomplished by increasing energy dissipation near the crack tip with various energy dissipation techniques. However, bio-materials exhibit extreme toughness by combining multi-scale energy dissipation with the ability to deflect and blunt an advancing crack tip. Here, we demonstrate a synthetic materials architecture that also exhibits multi-modal toughening, whereby embedding a suspension of micron sized and highly deformable liquid metal (LM) droplets inside a soft elastomer, the fracture energy dramatically increases by up to 50x (from 250 ± 50 J m-2 to 11,900 ± 2600 J m-2 ) over an unfilled polymer. For some LM-embedded elastomer (LMEE) compositions, the toughness is measured to be 33,500 ± 4300 J m-2 , which far exceeds the highest value previously reported for a soft elastic material. This extreme toughening is achieved by (i) increasing energy dissipation, (ii) adaptive crack movement, and (iii) effective elimination of the crack tip. Such properties arise from the deformability of the LM inclusions during loading, providing a new mechanism to not only prevent crack initiation, but also resist the propagation of existing tears for ultra tough, soft materials.


international symposium on antennas and propagation | 2017

Soft-matter electronics and multifunctional materials with polydisperse liquid metal suspensions: Material architecture, principles, and applications to programmable matter

Khalid Jawed; Navid Kazem; Carmel Majidi

Soft elastomers embedded with a polydisperse suspension of liquid metal (LM) droplets exhibit a unique and extraordinary combination of electrical, thermal, and mechanical properties. Eutectic gallium-indium (EGaIn) LM alloy is used for the dispersion phase on account of its low viscosity, negligible toxicity, and ability to form an emulsion with liquid polymer. Because the alloy is liquid at room temperature, it can alter the electrical and thermal properties of the composite — giving it metal-like bulk features — while preserving the mechanics of the elastomer matrix. These soft multifunctional materials can function as stretchable circuit wiring, high-k dielectric insulators, or heat dissipating films in a broad range of emerging “soft-matter” technologies. In particular, we look at applications to physically-reconfigurable system capable of reversible shape change.


Journal of Loss Prevention in The Process Industries | 2013

Comparison of API650-2008 provisions with FEM analyses for seismic assessment of existing steel oil storage tanks

Naghdali Hosseinzadeh; Hamid Kazem; Masoud Ghahremannejad; Ehsan Ahmadi; Navid Kazem


Soft Matter | 2015

Gelation and mechanical response of patchy rods

Navid Kazem; Carmel Majidi; Craig Maloney


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017

High thermal conductivity in soft elastomers with elongated liquid metal inclusions.

Navid Kazem; Michael D. Bartlett; Matthew J. Powell-Palm; Xiaonan Huang; Wenhuan Sun; Jonathan A. Malen; Carmel Majidi


International Journal of Advanced Structural Engineering | 2011

Seismic Vulnerability Evaluation of Pipe Rack Supporting Structures in A Petrochemical Complex

Mohammad Karimi; Naghdali Hosseinzadeh; Farshid Hosseini; Navid Kazem; Hamid Kazem

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Carmel Majidi

Carnegie Mellon University

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Andrew Fassler

Carnegie Mellon University

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Jonathan A. Malen

Carnegie Mellon University

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Eric J. Markvicka

Carnegie Mellon University

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Pratiti Mandal

Carnegie Mellon University

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Wenhuan Sun

Carnegie Mellon University

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Xiaonan Huang

Carnegie Mellon University

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Craig Maloney

Carnegie Mellon University

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