ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Stiff and strong yet light

Assistant Professor Luc St-Pierre studies and develops materials that have a cellular or a grid-like microstructure.
Aalto University School of Engineering

Luc St-Pierre is intrigued by the mechanics of materials; how materials deform and break under stress.

‘In my research, I focus on lattice materials: these are grid-like and cellular structures.  I am particularly interested in how the shape of the lattice affects its mechanical properties.’

St-Pierre and his colleagues aim to design and manufacture structures that are stiff, strong and light. These structures can also absorb a significant amount of energy, which makes them ideal for applications prone to collisions and impacts.

The lattice materials vary in scale; the cell size can vary from micrometres to a few centimetres. 

These kinds of structures are common in nature: plants, trees and bones have evolved a lattice microstructure to maximise their mechanical properties.

‘The lattices found in nature have good performances, but nature is limited in the choice of parent material available.  We can manufacture lattices out of any materials, for example, metals and ceramics, and this flexibility enables us to cover a very wide range of properties.’

St-Pierre considers these lattices as materials of their own, a sort of continuum in the development of materials.

‘Previously, new materials were developed by manipulating chemistry, simply by mixing different atoms together. This approach has been exploited systematically and leaves little room for further improvements. But what is exciting with lattices is that they give us the opportunity to create new materials by design: we can manipulate their microstructure to achieve unique combinations of properties.’

With their wide range of mechanical properties, lattice materials can be beneficial in multiple applications including aviation and space technology, construction engineering, shipbuilding and orthopaedics.

Spaghetti breaks

St-Pierre started his work as Assistant Professor at the Department of Mechanical Engineering in August 2016. He will start teaching fracture mechanics in the Mechanical Engineering master's degree programme during the next academic year. He promises to demonstrate theory with interesting practical examples.

‘Fracture mechanics is an exciting topic because it addresses how stuff breaks, and it is very easy to find examples of failure in our everyday life.’

Paper, dried spaghetti and ice hockey sticks are all fine demonstrative instruments.

‘Examples are helpful for the students to remember the theory and demonstrate how it can be applied in practice.’

St-Pierre points out that solid mechanics is present in our everyday lives. Everything we see around us is made of a material, and this material can break.

‘These days, we use more and more electronic appliances, but that doesn’t mean that solid mechanics is less relevant. These electronic components are subjected to heat, impacts and they can break like any other material.  To prevent these from failing, we need to apply the principles of solid mechanics.’

Materials with 3D printing

As St-Pierre was born in Canada, he adapted to the Finnish conditions quickly.

‘The climate and people’s mentality are similar in Finland and Canada. The Nordic countries feel like a second home to me.’

St-Pierre got to know Europe when he had a student exchange in Paris in the early 21st century. He came to Finland from England where he completed his PhD and worked as a researcher for nearly a decade.

‘Aalto University was looking for a person with expertise in solid mechanics and I saw this as a good opportunity to extend my research. I was also attracted by the exceptional facilities for 3D printing. It is one of the key technologies enabling us to manufacture complex lattice structures.’

At Aalto University, St-Pierre got involved in a research community in which lattice materials and sandwich structures are studied intensively, especially in shipbuilding.

If St-Pierre is lucky, we will have the opportunity to meet him on skates; he is looking for a team that he could play ice hockey with. It is only natural, as he comes from the mighty ice hockey city, Montreal.

Contact information:

Assistant Professor Luc St-Pierre, luc.st-pierre@aalto.fi

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Filmbot robot
Research & Art Published:

Researchers make micromanipulation more accessible

FilMBot aims to lower the barrier to high-precision work in education, research, and micro-assembly
Group of students at round tables talking and working on laptops in a bright office space
Research & Art, Studies Published:

Positive communication and improvisation help build students’ communication skills to meet employer needs

The School of Business redesigned its mandatory first-year communication course
Avner Peled's doctoral thesis presented in the Aalto ARTS 2025 annual review
Research & Art Published:

Learning Environments Research Group — 2025 in Review

2025 recap: three doctoral theses on context-aware interaction design, AI as creative learning partner, and telerobotic puppetry for peacebuilding.
Juha Gogulski, kuva: Matti Ahlgren, Aalto-yliopisto
Research & Art Published:

Juha Gogulski develops personalized brain stimulation therapy for depression

Aalto University postdoctoral researcher and Instrufoundation Fellow grant recipient Juha Gogulski is developing individualized brain stimulation treatments for patients with depression.