Patrick Cordier (mineralogist)


Patrick Cordier is a mineralogist who uses experimental and numerical approaches to study the plasticity of geological materials. He has authored or co-authored over 170 articles in international scientific journals. He received the Dana Medal from the Mineralogical Society of America in 2016, and is currently a chief editor of the European Journal of Mineralogy.

Education

Cordier obtained a master's degree in materials science in 1985 from the School of Engineers of Lille, and a DEA from the University of Lille 1 in materials science. He completed a doctoral thesis on the plasticity of quartz, directed by Professor Jean-Claude Doukhan, at the University of Lille 1 in 1989.

Early career

In 1989, Cordier worked as post-doctoral scientist with Professor Arthur Heuer. The same year, he joined the University of Lille 1 as an assistant professor. He passed his habilitation to lead scientific research in 1995 at Lille, and became an associate professor of physics in 1996. He led the research group for mineral physics at the 'Unité Materiaux Transformations' research institute at the University of Lille 1 from 1999 to 2017.

Current research

Cordier is a specialist in transmission electron microscopy and has devoted himself particularly to the study of crystal defects such as dislocations and the plasticity of minerals. In particular, he studies the plasticity of the high-pressure mineral phases of the Earth's mantle. With Philippe Carrez, he is currently developing an approach to this problem based on multi-scale numerical modelling.
He has regularly visited at the Bayerisches Geoinstitut at the University of Bayreuth since 1998 to carry out deformation experiments at very high pressures.

Honors

Cordier has received French recognition for distinguished service in education, and the Grand Prix Frédéric Kuhlmann of the Société des Sciences, de l’Agriculture et des Arts de Lille in 2015.
He has also been a fellow of the Mineralogical Society of America since 2008 and received the Dana Medal from them in 2016..
In 2019, he became the first French fellow of the American Geophysical Union in the focus group 'Mineral and Rock Physics'.
He is the current president of the International Mineralogical Association. He has also served as the first vice-president of the IMA, and the vice-president and president of the French Mineralogical Society.
He has twice received ERC-Adv grants, for the projects RheoMan and TimeMan.