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Prof. De Lorenzis and her group develop models and computational frameworks to describe complex mechanical processes, with the ultimate goal of enabling computational material, process and structural design and optimization. Their research deploys modern simulation methods and develops them further to meet the ever-increasing demand for accuracy and efficiency. The group also values and pursues experimental validation and, whenever needed, develops new testing setups and techniques. The focus at this moment is especially on fracture and fatigue mechanics, contact and interface mechanics, and modeling and simulation of additive manufacturing processes. Research methods are based on multiscale and multifield modeling, high-performance computing, mechanical testing including computed tomography and the related imaging techniques, and data-driven approaches.
Laura De Lorenzis received her Engineering degree and her PhD from the University of her hometown Lecce, in southern Italy, where she first stayed as Assistant and later as Associate Professor of Solid and structural mechanics. In March 2013 she moved to the TU Braunschweig, Germany, as Professor and Director of the Institute of Applied Mechanics. There she was founding member and Chair (2017-2020) of the Center for Mechanics, Uncertainty and Simulation in Engineering. Since February 2020 she is Professor of Computational Mechanics at the ETH Zürich. She was visiting scholar in several renowned institutions, including Chalmers University of Technology, the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (as holder of a Fulbright Fellowship in 2006), the Leibniz University of Hannover (with an Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship in 2010-2011), the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Cape Town. She is the recipient of several prizes, including the RILEM L’Hermite Medal 2011, the AIMETA Junior Prize 2011, the IIFC Young Investigator Award 2012, two best paper awards and two student teaching prizes at the TU Braunschweig. In 2011 she was awarded a European Research Council Starting Researcher Grant. She has authored or co-authored more than 120 papers on international journals on different topics of computational and applied mechanics.
Prof. De Lorenzis and her group develop models and computational frameworks to describe complex mechanical processes, with the ultimate goal of enabling computational material, process and structural design and optimization. Their research deploys modern simulation methods and develops them further to meet the ever-increasing demand for accuracy and efficiency. The group also values and pursues experimental validation and, whenever needed, develops new testing setups and techniques. The focus at this moment is especially on fracture and fatigue mechanics, contact and interface mechanics, and modeling and simulation of additive manufacturing processes. Research methods are based on multiscale and multifield modeling, high-performance computing, mechanical testing including computed tomography and the related imaging techniques, and data-driven approaches.
Laura De Lorenzis received her Engineering degree and her PhD from the University of her hometown Lecce, in southern Italy, where she first stayed as Assistant and later as Associate Professor of Solid and structural mechanics. In March 2013 she moved to the TU Braunschweig, Germany, as Professor and Director of the Institute of Applied Mechanics. There she was founding member and Chair (2017-2020) of the Center for Mechanics, Uncertainty and Simulation in Engineering. Since February 2020 she is Professor of Computational Mechanics at the ETH Zürich. She was visiting scholar in several renowned institutions, including Chalmers University of Technology, the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (as holder of a Fulbright Fellowship in 2006), the Leibniz University of Hannover (with an Alexander von Humboldt Fellowship in 2010-2011), the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Cape Town. She is the recipient of several prizes, including the RILEM L’Hermite Medal 2011, the AIMETA Junior Prize 2011, the IIFC Young Investigator Award 2012, two best paper awards and two student teaching prizes at the TU Braunschweig. In 2011 she was awarded a European Research Council Starting Researcher Grant. She has authored or co-authored more than 120 papers on international journals on different topics of computational and applied mechanics.
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Nature materialsno. 1 (2024): 124-130
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Shaohua Yang,Dominic Gerber, Yanxia Feng,Nicolas Bain, Matthias Kuster,Laura de Lorenzis,Ye Xu,Eric R. Dufresne,Robert W. Style
arxiv(2024)
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JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICS AND PHYSICS OF SOLIDS (2023): 105471-105471
Cement and Concrete Research (2023): 107245-107245
Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering (2023): 116197-116197
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Current Trends and Open Problems in Computational Mechanicspp.75-82, (2022)
Non-standard Discretisation Methods in Solid MechanicsLecture Notes in Applied and Computational Mechanicspp.449-504, (2022)
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