UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Five University faculty members have received 2025 Faculty Scholar Medals for Outstanding Achievement.
They are Allison Beese, professor of materials science and engineering in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (EMS) and mechanical engineering in the College of Engineering; David Almeida, professor of human development and family studies in the College of Health and Human Development; Joseph Cotruvo Jr., professor of chemistry in the Eberly College of Science; Lauren Zarzar, professor of chemistry in the Eberly College and materials science and engineering in EMS; and Nicolas de Warren, professor of philosophy and Jewish studies in the College of the Liberal Arts.
Established in 1980, the award recognizes scholarly or creative excellence represented by a single contribution or a series of contributions around a coherent theme. A committee of peers reviews nominations and selects candidates.
Allison Beese
Nominators said Beese’s pioneering research has led to a fundamental understanding of how microstructures and defects dictate the deformation and failure in additively manufactured metals and alloys. She also designs experiments for functionally graded metals in which properties change throughout, which leads to more purposeful components with tailored multifunctionality. She received the Faculty Scholar Medal for Engineering.
“Beese is an internationally acclaimed researcher in additive manufacturing and metallurgy. She is providing leadership on campus that is advancing this important area of research and education,” a nominator said. “She has been an energizing presence in our additively manufactured metals community and a true asset to Penn State.”
Nominators said she is taking novel approaches to creating materials and researching areas where they fail, which offers the necessary foundation for designing new metals, particularly additively manufactured alloys.
“Dr. Beese’s hybrid experimental-computational approach has led to feasibility diagrams that are being adopted worldwide for the qualification of parts made by additive manufacturing towards enabling their safe adoption in structural components for point-of-need manufacturing, addressing supply chain issues, for complex geometries enabling light-weighting and for customized implants,” a nominator said.
Nominators called her approach to research “meticulously detailed,” adding that her work on deformation and failure of these materials under realistic conditions is paving the way for adopting additively manufactured parts in structural components. This innovation will reduce energy, waste and lead times for manufactured components, nominators said.
Beese’s approach to understanding additively manufactured metals uses computations to predict phases and link microstructural features, including porosity, to properties including fracture behavior. Her team uses machine learning to link processing signals to microstructure and mechanical properties, a process that has garnered international attention, nominators said.
One area Beese has made an impact is in highlighting the impact of defects introduced during the additive manufacturing process. Beese’s research shines a light on the complex physical processes at play during the interaction of energy sources and the materials being fed to the manufacturing machines. Nominators called her approach unique and creative because she simultaneously combines novel experiments with advanced simulations and computational models that give results consistent with real-world manufacturing and the challenges associated with creating these high-tech materials.
“I cannot think of anyone who is more qualified for this recognition than Dr. Beese,” a nominator said. “Her sustained achievements, intellectual contributions and broad impact is felt both here in the U.S. and abroad. She has demonstrated exceptional leadership in the field of processing-structure-mechanical property relationships in materials. The international materials science and engineering community is fortunate to have her as a member of our professional team. She is a true pioneer who not only solves existing problems but defines future directions for an entirely new field.”