The Emergence and Growth of Materials Science in Swedish Universities
Journal article, 2017

The cross-disciplinary field of materials science emerged and grew to prominence in the second half of the twentieth century, drawing theoretical and experimental strength from the rapid progress in several natural sciences disciplines and connecting to many industrial applications. In this article, we chronicle and analyze how materials science established itself in Swedish universities in the 1960s and after. We build on previous historical accounts of the growth of materials science elsewhere, especially in the United States, and the conceptual guidance that these studies offer. We account for the emergence and growth of materials science in Sweden from the early influences brought back by academics from postdoc stays in the United States, through the creation of the first funding programs in the late 1970s, to the breakthrough of materials science in Sweden in the 1990s and its growth to a true area of strength and priority in Swedish science today. In line with previous studies, we highlight the role of funding agencies, providing the means for new cross -disciplinary activities across and between traditional disciplinary structures, and the role of new instrumentation, providing new experimental opportunities and uniting disciplinarily disparate research activities around common goals, as crucial in the process. Also, the role of entrepreneurially minded individuals is evident in the story: materials science was developed in Sweden largely by a new generation of scientists who established new activities within existing organizational structures, and thus accomplished long-term institutional change in a well -established field and system.

academic science

Sweden

instrumentation

nanotechnology

materials science

research funding

Author

Johan Gribbe

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Science, Technology and Society

Olof Hallonsten

Lund University

Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences

1939-1811 (ISSN) 1939182x (eISSN)

Vol. 47 4 459-493

Subject Categories

History

DOI

10.1525/hsns.2017.47.4.459

More information

Latest update

6/25/2018