Materials Project Laboratory
learning on MIT
General Information
Subject 3.042 (previously numbered 3.082) has existed in its present form for more than a decade, when it replaced four separate laboratories specializing in DMSE’s then restricted elective areas (ceramics, electronic materials, metals, and polymers.) Thus 3.042 is a single laboratory centered on materials processing and design that deals with all types of materials.
As its name implies, the 3.042 Materials Project Laboratory involves working with such operations as investment casting of metals, injection molding of polymers, and sintering of ceramics. After all the abstraction and theory in the lecture part of the DMSE curriculum, many students have found this hands-on experience with materials to be very fun stuff - several have said that 3.042/3.082 was their favorite DMSE subject. The lab is more than operating processing equipment, however. It is intended also to emulate professional practice in materials engineering project management, with aspects of design, analysis, teamwork, literature and patent searching, Web creation and oral presentation, and more.
Academic Procedures
Regular laboratory hours are Tuesday/Thursday 2-5pm. Students are free to perform laboratory work whenever they wish, although safety rules prohibit doing laboratory work while alone.
3.042 is one of DMSE’s two communication-intensive; subjects (3.014 is the other), and student communication will be a substantial portion of the grade. Each team will develop a Web site containing the project’s goals, background, results, conclusions, etc.; this site takes the place of the usual written report. It often works well to have each team member be responsible for one of the major Web pages (background, design, materials, processing). At the time of the final presentation on Thursday Week #14, the team will also have prepared a hallway display of their project, similar to those of earlier 3.042 teams which are to be found in various hallways around DMSE.
The Web site will also contain a link to the team’s electronic laboratory notebook, which will be kept current as the term progresses. The notebook will contain a concise but thorough description of each day’s results and plans, along with data analyses and scanned-in pictures and graphs of important results. The notebook will also contain safety-related issues, such as MSDS’s for each material used and safety protocols for each experimental procedure carried out by the team.
so this is something i will have to do on my own, perhaps with aid from husband. this substack will serve as the called-for website.
Gantt charts… is a bar chart that illustrates a project schedule. It was designed and popularized by Henry Gantt around the years 1910–1915. Modern Gantt charts also show the dependency relationships between activities and the current schedule status.
here is the mit ocw youtube channel
This material science is fascinating stuff. It would behoove us all to learn.


