Metadata
Title
Materials Science
Category
graduate
UUID
9b75426c40154433896a507e14666a2f
Source URL
https://www.utwente.nl/en/education/master/programmes/applied-physics/specialisa...
Parent URL
https://www.utwente.nl/en/education/master/programmes/applied-physics/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T02:50:01+00:00
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Materials Science

Source: https://www.utwente.nl/en/education/master/programmes/applied-physics/specialisations/materials-science/ Parent: https://www.utwente.nl/en/education/master/programmes/applied-physics/

Learn to apply the fundamental principles of physics that underlie the properties, structure, and behaviour of materials to develop cutting-edge materials for tomorrow’s societal challenges.

Whether we are talking about clean energy technologies, information technology, high-tech manufacturing, or biomedical devices: advancements in industries rely heavily on breakthroughs in materials science. Imagine smartphones with longer battery life, energy-efficient AI chips, and materials for quantum computers. Or superconductors that enable higher-resolution imaging in MRI scanners or more efficient windmills. Or what about new solar panels that are better at capturing sunlight? In the specialisation Materials Science, you will study the fundamental principles of physics underlying the properties, structure and behaviour of new and cutting-edge materials. If you want to contribute to innovations in a wide range of industries – from the energy transition to tomorrow’s chips - the specialisation in Materials Science is right for you.

A very important and interesting area of research within materials science right now is energy-efficient electronics. If you look at the huge amount of energy consumption in computers, data centres and AI, there is a world to win with materials that can make information technology much more efficient.

Prof. Dr. Ir. Hans Hilgenkamp

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Full Professor of Applied Physics and Nanotechnology.

People page

What is Materials Science?

In this specialisation, you will study the fundamental relationship between materials’ structure and properties in order to develop and/or optimise (new) materials that can exhibit specific optical, electrical, magnetic or mechanical characteristics. In doing so, you will combine computational methods (e.g. modelling, measurements, data analytics) with experimental research in high-tech laboratories. In the end, you will have an in-depth understanding of how physical principles like thermodynamics, quantum physics, optics, electromagnetism, solid-state physics and quantum mechanics govern material behaviour and you will know how to manipulate and control these principles to achieve desired material properties for specific applications.

Examples of courses you will follow during this specialisation:

Can you imagine building electronic systems that are almost as energy efficient as the neurons in our brains? Joining this specialisation, you will acquire specific techniques to create thin films, that can be used in a wide variety of applications – from data storage technologies to drug delivery systems and from solar cells to optical coatings for eyeglasses, camera lenses or lithography systems that are used in microchip design. You will be able to work on real-life projects in collaboration with industrial partners like ASML, Zeiss, and DESY, to name a few.

What will you learn?

As a graduate of this Master's and this specialisation, you have acquired specific, scientific knowledge, skills and values, which you can put to good use in your future job.

Knowledge

After completing this Master’s specialisation, you:

Skills

After successfully finishing this Master’s specialisation, you:

Other master’s and specialisations

Is this specialisation not exactly what you are looking for? Maybe one of the other specialisations suits you better. Or find out more about related Master’s:

Curriculum