Eisenlohr, P.; Sadrabadi, P.; Blum, W.: Quantifying the distributions of dislocation spacings and cell sizes. Journal of Materials Science 43, pp. 2700 - 2707 (2008)
Frommert, M.; Zobrist, C.; Lahn, L.; Böttcher, A.; Raabe, D.; Zaefferer, S.: Texture measurement of grain-oriented electrical steels after secondary recrystallization. Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials 320, pp. e657 - e660 (2008)
Frommeyer, G.; Rablbauer, R.: High temperature materials based on the intermetallic compound NiAl reinforced by refractory metals for advanced energy conversion technologies. Steel Research International 79, pp. 507 - 513 (2008)
Fujita, N.; Jones, R.; Eberlein, T. A. G.; Öberg, S.; Briddon, P. R.: Theoretical Aspects on the Formation of the Tri-interstitial Nitrogen Defect in Silicon. Solid State Phenomena 131-133, pp. 265 - 269 (2008)
Fujita, N.; Jones, R.; Öberg, S.; Briddon, P. R.; Blumenau, A. T.: A Theoretical Study of Copper Contaminated Dislocations in Silicon. Solid State Phenomena 131-133, pp. 259 - 264 (2008)
Godara, A.; Raabe, D.: Microstrain localisation measurement in epoxy FRCs during plastic deformation using a digital image correlation technique coupled with scanning electron microscopy. Nondestructive Testing and Evaluation 3, pp. 229 - 240 (2008)
Hausbrand, R.; Stratmann, M.; Rohwerder, M.: The physical meaning of electrode potentials at metal surfaces and polymer/metal interfaces: Consequences for delamination. Journal of the Electrochemical Society 155 (7), pp. C369 - C379 (2008)
Herrera, C.; Ponge, D.; Raabe, D.: Characterization of the microstrcture, crystallographic texture and segregation of an as-cast duplex stainless steel slab. Steel Research International 79 (6), pp. 482 - 488 (2008)
Hild, S.; Marti, O.; Ziegler, A.; Rieger, B.: Spatial distribution of calcite and amorphous calcium carbonate in the cuticle of the terrestrial crustaceans Porcellio scaber and Armadillidium vulgare. Journal of Structural Biology 163, pp. 100 - 108 (2008)
Isaac, A.; Sket, F.; Borbély, A.; Sauthoff, G.; Pyzalla, A. R.: Study of cavity evolution during creep by synchrotron microtomography using a volume correlation method. Praktische Metallographie/Practical Metllography 45 (5), pp. 242 - 245 (2008)
Isaac, A.; Sket, F.; Sauthoff, G.; Pyzalla, A.: In-situ 3D Quantification of the Evolution of Creep Cavity Size, Shape and Spatial Orientation using Synchrotron X-ray Tomography. Materials Science and Engineering A 478, pp. 108 - 118 (2008)
Khorashadizadeh, A.; Winning, M.; Raabe, D.: 3D tomographic EBSD measurements of heavily deformed ultra fine grained Cu-0.17wt%Zr obtained from ECAP. Materials Science Forum 584-586, pp. 434 - 439 (2008)
Kostka, A.; Tak, K.-G.; Eggeler, G.: On the effect of equal-channel angular pressing on creep of tempered martensite ferritic steels. Materials Science and Engineering A 481-482, pp. 723 - 726 (2008)
Kumar, D.; Bieler, T. R.; Eisenlohr, P.; Mason, D. E.; Crimp, M. A.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: On Predicting Nucleation of Microcracks Due to Slip-Twin Interactions at Grain Boundaries in Duplex gamma-TiAl. Journal of Engineering and Materials Technology 130 (02), pp. 021012-1 - 021012-12 (2008)
The Department of Interface Chemistry and Surface Engineering (GO) is mainly focussing on corrosion and electrochemical energy conversion. It is internationally known to be one of the leading groups in the field of electrochemical sciences. Our mission is to combine both fundamental and applied sciences to tackle key-questions for a progress…
Plasticity, fatigue, and fracture of materials arise from localized deformation processes, which can be altered by the materials’ environment. Unravelling these mechanisms at variable temperatures and different atmospheres (like hydrogen), are essential to enhance mechanical performance and lifespan. This requires to understand the microstructure and its evolution down to the atomic level. The department is dedicated to crafting materials with superior mechanical properties by elucidating deformation mechanisms. This involves employing advanced transmission electron microscopy techniques and conducting nano-/micromechanical tests on complex, micro-architectured and/or miniaturized materials.
The department ‘Microstructure Physics and Alloy Design’ investigates the fundamentals of the relations between synthesis, microstructure and properties of often complex nanostructured materials. The focus lies on metallic alloys such as aluminium, titanium, steels, high and medium entropy alloys, superalloys, magnesium, magnetic and thermoelectric…
The mission of the Department Computational Materials Design (CM) is to develop and apply multi-scale computational methods that bridge the quantum mechanical foundations of matter with real-world materials discovery.