Scientific Events

Ancient craft, new perspective: Recovery and recrystallization of deformed metal nanoparticles

Metallic nanoparticles are utilized in a growing number of applications due to their unique and tunable properties. However, one of the primary tools used to tune bulk metals properties, recrystallization, is yet to be used in the case of nanoparticles. We studied pristine, single crystal platinum nanoparticles during a recrystallization annealing after deformation. We found that deformation causes a dramatic change in particles orientation, while annealing induced a plethora of different particle behaviors. Microstructurally, nucleation of new grains was observed, but in the smallest particles these new grains were quickly absorbed back into the deformed matrix. We describe a phenomenological kinetic model to explain the strong correlation between the particle properties and their annealing behavior. [more]
Organised by: Jörg Neugebauer (Max-Planck-Institut for Sustainable Materials), Juergen Fuhrmann (Weierstraß-Institut für Angewandte Analysis und Stochastik (WIAS)), Richard Hennig (University of Florida), Mauro Maggioni (John Hopkins University)Keith Promislow (Michigan State University), Katsuyo Thornton (University of Michigan)Bilge Yildiz (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) [more]

Closing metal loops sustainably - opportunities & challenges for a successful circular economy

Colloquia Series on Sustainable Metallurgy
Metals are essential for climate and digital technologies, making resource-efficient use and high-quality recycling across their entire lifecycle crucial. This lecture explores the role of recycling in a true circular economy, highlighting the need for clear system definitions, realistic expectations, and coordinated processes to recover valuable materials sustainably and effectively. [more]
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