Mechanical behavior of structures, with scales widely varying from a kilometer (earthquake engineering) to a nanometer (composites reinforced by carbon nanotubes), based on a strong multidisciplinary approach with combined experience and supercomputing

The laboratory is organized as a matrix, with two permanent teams and three lines of research on current scientific subjects. The permanent teams combine complementary skills and methodologies based around Mechanics:

  • Mechanics, Physics and Biology for the MSE team

  • Mechanics and Applied Mathematics for the DSE team

The Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) team has a dozen researchers and instructor-researchers working in complementary fields related to metallic materials, geomaterials, reinforced polymers and biomaterials and biological tissues. Covering several scales, from nanometers to a massive macroscopic sample, the approaches used combine experience, modeling and simulation, in a constant dialogue.

The Digital Science and Engineering (DSE) team develops digital models and methods to simulate the mechanical behavior of materials and structures. Models developed range from the atomic scale, with ab initio finite elements used to determine the mechanical properties of a material, from a simplified resolution of the Schrödinger equation to the kilometric scale for seismic calculations used to identify site responses within cities.

 

Lines of Research

The lines of research bring together researchers from both teams with scientific objectives and/or fields of application that correspond to current scientific challenges:

  • Approaches related to multiphysics, interactions between mechanics, physics and biology, interfaces, for the MPI line of research
  • dynamics, waves, loads and random media for the DynOdAs [Dynamics, Waves and Hazards] line of research
  • Multi-scale approaches to the mechanics of materials and structures for the CM3 line of research

The application fields in this research relate to energy (nuclear), transportation (aeronautic, railway, automobile), civil engineering (soil, seismic), and health (biomechanical prostheses, tissue bioengineering).

 

Key Figures

  • Instructor-researchers and researchers: 19

  • Visitors and post-docs: 8

  • Technical and administrative staff: 18

  • PhD students: 39

  • Tier A publications (Source: Web of Science): 34

  • Value of signed contracts: €1,045,875 (excluding chairs) 

Academic Partners

Numerous French universities and CNRS, CEA laboratories, etc.

Abroad:

  • Technische Universität Wien (Austria)
  • Université de Louvain and Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium)
  • Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)
  • École Polytechnique de Montréal and University of British Columbia (Canada)
  • Institute of Metal Research Shenyang/Chinese Academy of Science, Institute of Physics/Chinese Academy of Sciences, Northwest University, Beijing University of Science and Technology and Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics (China)
  • Universidad de los Andes (Colombia)
  • Czech Technical University in Prague (Czech Republic)
  • Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece)
  • Università Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria (Italy)
  • Saitama University (Japan)
  • Instituto Superior Técnico (Universidade de Lisboa) and Universidade do Minho (Portugal)
  • Perm State Pedagogical University (Russia)
  • BarcelonaTech (Spain)
  • Tishreen University in Latakia (Syria)
  • Faculty of Sciences of Bizerta (Tunisia)
  • Institute for Computational Engineering and Science (University of Texas at Austin)
  • Ames Lab (Iowa State University, IA), University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign, IL), Jet Propulsion Laboratory (NASA-Caltech, Pasadena, CA) and Columbia University (New York, NY) (U.S.A.)
  • Universidad Central de Venezuela (Venezuela)
     

 

Industrial Partners

ArcelorMittal, Areva, Aubert & Duval, Bouyer Leroux, CEA, CNES, EADS, EDF, Gecko Biomedical, IFTH, INERIS, ITER, Lhoist, Michelin, NECS, Nexans, Orona, Schlumberger, SNCF, Safran Aircraft Engines, Thales

 

Collaborations and Partnerships

Fields of Application

Natural and anthropogenic risks, transportation (space, aeronautics, railway, automobile), energy (oil, nuclear facility security: damage, corrosion, fatigue), nanomaterials, health biomechanics and engineering

 

Specific Equipment

Access to the SGI Altix ICE 8400 LX and UV100 computer at the CentraleSupélec Scientific Computing Center

Software developed in the laboratory

 

Mechanical testing Resource Center

 

Microscopy Resource Center

 

CONTACT

 

Website: www.mssmat.ecp.fr

Director: Damien Durville
Tel.: +33 (0)1 41 13 12 90
Fax: +33 (0)1 41 13 13 42

E-mail: nathalie.langlet@ecp.fr  

Latest submissions

Article in a review
12/01/2025
Detecting water leaks in underground pipelines by radar and dielectric analysis
Benhui Fan, Ao Wang, Jean-Marie Fleureau, Bruno Beaucamp, Vincent Guilbert, Cyril Ledun, Alain Sylvestre, Cyrille Fauchard
PROCEEDINGS
11/14/2025
Pipeline for Semantic Segmentation of Large Railway Point Clouds
Hugo Gabrielidis, Filippo Gatti, Stephane Vialle
Communication on a congress
10/19/2025
Modelling the impact of linear infrastructure on species dispersal in a changing climate: a scalable surrogate approach
Jean-Baptiste Page, Didier Clouteau, Pierre Jehel, Filippo Gatti, Carmen Bessa-Gomes
Work chapter
09/01/2025
A novel DDDAS architecture combining advanced sensing and simulation technologies for effective real-time structural health monitoring
Ludovic Chamoin, Emmanuel Baranger, Antoine Benady, Pierre-Étienne Charbonnel, Matthieu Diaz, Sahar Farahbakhsh, Laurent Fribourg, Daniel Martin Xavier, Martin Poncelet
Article in a review
09/01/2025
Carbon nanotube effects on low-cement mortar performance and eco-efficiency
E.D. Reis, Fabrice Gatuingt, F.S.J. Poggiali, A.C.S. Bezerra
Browse all laboratory submissions on HAL