Young Ceramics Networks
YCN representative - Morocco
Soukaina Lamnini
YCN representative from the Moroccan Ceramic Society
Dr. Soukaina Lamnini hold a PhD degree in Material Science and Technologies since September 2020 from Obuda University in Budapest, Hungary. She successfully defended her thesis with «Summa Cum Laude» at the Energy Research Center (MTA-EK) in Budapest. She focused on the synthesis and Tribo-mechanical characterization of Yttria Stabilized Zirconia (8YSZ) reinforced MWCNTs composites using Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS) to overcome the brittleness of the Zirconia matrix at the monolithic state and to tune the capability of composite self-healing against crack propagation. She worked as a postdoc researcher at Politecnico di Torino, Italy under the framework of NewSoc project aiming at improving the performance and durability of SOFCs compared to the state of the art. She has a matured experience in various disciplines related to glass paste formulation for robocasting, development and thermal characterization (HSM, DIL, DTA) of glass sealing and joining for SOFCs as well as the optimization of MnCu spinel coatings on steels using Electrophoretic deposition.
Besides her research activities, she has been deeply involved in several scientific manifestations and joined the department of Industrial Engineering of the University of Padova, Italy as a visiting researcher. In 2019, she represented the Hungarian Ceramic Society in the student speech contest in Torino and in 2020 she attended the January 2020 ACerS Winter Workshop in Daytona Beach, Florida thanks to a grant award provided by the JECS Trust. Today, being honoured to represent YCN in Morocco Dr. Soukaina is strongly committed to tightening and ease the Moroccan/European collaboration and correspondence by gathering a network of young and senior researchers highly motivated to advance in the field of technical ceramics for a wider and useful implementation in our societies.
Last news
YCN Newsletter 32 - Expert opinion - Maria Paula da Silva Seabra - CICECO, University of Aveiro
Turning Waste into Raw Materials for the Ceramic Industry.
Waste materials were once seen as a burden but are increasingly being redefined as valuable resources for ceramic production. Through advances in materials engineering, waste can be used as secondary raw materials in the ceramic industry. This shift enables more circular and resource-efficient ceramic manufacturing systems.
YCN Newsletter 32 - Industry in Spot - Dr. Daniel Bomze - Lithoz
Implementing 3D-Printed Technical Ceramics in Regulated Medical Fields.
Bringing a new manufacturing technology into medicine requires far more than producing an impressive component. In highly regulated fields, innovation must be translated into repeatable processes, documented quality, reliable materials and, ultimately, evidence of clinical value. Lithoz has spent more than a decade building this bridge for Lithography-based Ceramic Manufacturing (LCM).
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