Gupta’s work focuses on lightweight materials with high damage tolerance for helmets, body armor and vehicle structures—research with enormous potential for making those products not only lighter but safer.
He will be presented with the Silver Medal, which is given to mid-career professionals, in October, when members of ASM International gather in Montreal for their annual Materials Science & Technology Conference & Exhibition.
The medal is awarded in part for noteworthy books, papers, patents, new materials and processes, and unique innovations. Some of Gupta’s most significant recent research is at the behest of the U.S. military: He has developed polymer-based composite materials that permit the Navy to build faster, lighter ships requiring less maintenance and metal-based composite materials for lightweight blast armor for Army vehicles that allow for decreased fuel consumption, increased load capacity, and longer missions.
He is collaborating on moderately priced lightweight brake rotors that could significantly improve the fuel economy of vehicles, and his research on helmet materials aims to improve the safety of athletes and troops.
ASM International also considers the impact of a nominee’s accomplishments on industry and society, and in choosing Gupta it noted that he is often called upon to represent his profession to the general public. Among the high-profile print and broadcast outlets that have covered him are the Discovery Channel, Reuters and Scientific American.
His explanation of the science behind athletic helmet construction was featured by NBC as part of a National Science Foundation-sponsored video series for the 2012 Summer Olympics that attracted more than 125 million viewers and won a Telly Award.
ASM International, which was founded in 1913, is dedicated to serving the materials science and engineering profession. (ASM is an acronym for American Society of Metals, but after it expanded its geographic scope beyond America alone and broadened its technical scope beyond metals to include other engineered materials-composites, plastics, ceramics, and electronic materials; the society was renamed ASM International in 1986.)