Scientific Events

Room: Seminarraum 1 Location: Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung GmbH

Sustainable Metallurgy

MPIE Seminar
Metallic materials which have enabled progress over thousands of years and are produced in huge quantities (e.g. 1.8 billion tons of steels per year), are now facing severe and in part abrupt limits set by sustainability constraints and the associated legislative measures. Accelerated demand for structural alloys in key areas such as energy, construction, infrastructure, safety, mobile communication and transportation creates growth rates of up to 200% until 2050. Yet, most of these materials are energy, greenhouse gas and pollution intense when extracted, produced and manufactured. The lecture provides an introduction to this field and reviews approaches to improve the sustainability of and through structural metallic alloys. It reports about progress in direct sustainability for different steps along the value chain including CO2-reduced primary production; recycling; scrap-compatible alloy design; contaminant tolerance of alloys; and improved alloy longevity through corrosion protection, damage tolerance and repairability for longer product use. It is also shown how structural materials enable improved energy efficiency through reduced weight, higher thermal stability, and better mechanical properties. The respective leverage effects of the individual measures on rendering structural alloys more sustainable are described. [more]

Non-monotonic rheology of a magnetic liquid crystal system in an external fieldNon-monotonic rheology of a magnetic liquid crystal system in an external field

MPIE Seminar
Utilizing molecular dynamics simulations, we report a non-monotonic dependence of the shear stress on the strength of an external magnetic eld (H) in a liquid-crystalline mixture of magnetic and non-magnetic anisotropic particles.This non-monotonic behavior is in sharp contrast with the well-studied monotonic H-dependency of the shear stress in conventional ferro uids, where the shear stress increases with H until it reaches a saturation value. We relatethe origin of this non-monotonicity to the competing eects of particle alignment along the shear-induced direction, on the one hand, and the magnetic eld direction on the other hand. To isolate the role of these competing eects,we consider a two-component mixture composed of particles with eectively identical steric interactions, where the orientations of a small fraction, i.e. the magnetic ones, are coupled to the external magnetic eld. By increasing Hfrom zero, the orientations of the magnetic particles show a Freederickz-like transition and eventually start deviating from the shear-induced orientation, leading to an increase in shear stress. Upon further increase of H, a demixingof the magnetic particles, from the non-magnetic ones, occurs which leads to a drop in shear stress, hence creating a non-monotonic response to H. Unlike the equilibrium demixing phenomena reported in previous studies, the demixingobserved here is neither due to size-polydispersity nor due to a wall-induced nematic transition. Based on a simplied Onsager analysis, we rather argue that it occurs solely due to packing entropy of particles with dierent shear- or magnetic-eld-induced orientations. [more]
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