Fenster, J. C.; Rohwerder, M.; Hassel, A. W.: Impedance-Titration: A Novel Method for Understanding the Kinetics of Corrosion in Aqueous Solutions. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spanien (2008)
Fink, N.; Valtiner, M.; Klimow, G.; Grundmeier, G.: Investigation of forming behaviour of ultra-thin hybrid conversion layers on zinc coated steel. The 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Seville, Spain (2008)
Fujita, N.; Jones, R.; Öberg, S.; Briddon, P. R.: Properties of extended vacancy-type defects in diamond. DIAMOND 2008, 19th European conference on diamond, diamond-like materials, carbon nanotubes, and nitrides, Sitges, Spain (2008)
Hassel, A. W.: Progress in the Electrochemical Processing of Directionally Solidified Eutectics. 7th International Symposium on Electrochemical Micro- and Nanosystems, Ein-Gedi, Israel (2008)
Hassel, A. W.; Milenkovic, S.; Smith, A. J.: Nanowires and Nanowire Arrays by an Electrochemical Structuring of Directionally Solidified Eutectics. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spain (2008)
Khan, T. R.; de la Fuenta, D.; Rohwerder, M.: Electrolytic co-deposition of SiO2 nanoparticles with zinc for improvement of corrosion protection. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Seville, Spain (2008)
Mardare, A. I.; Wieck, A. D.; Hassel, A. W.: Combinatorial microelectrochemistry using an automated scanning droplet cell. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spanien (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Contribution to the analysis of the corrosion process of metallic materials in incineration plants. EUROCORR 2008, EICC Edinburgh, UK (2008)
Stratmann, M.; Hassel, A. W.; Rohwerder, M.: Microelectrochemical Investigations of Interfaces and Surfaces of Advanced Materialks. 7th International Symposium on Electrochemical Micro- and Nanosystems, Ein-Gedi, Israel (2008)
Venzlaff, H.; Widdel, F.; Stratmann, M.; Hassel, A. W.: Microbial corrosion induced by a new highly aggressive SRB strain. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spain (2008)
Dick, A.; Hickel, T.; Neugebauer, J.: First Principles Predictions of Mechanical Properties of FeMn-Alloys. Workshop des SFB761, Beilngries, Germany (2008)
Giza, M.; Thissen, P.; Grundmeier, G.: Adsorption and Adhesion of Short and Long-Chain Organo-Phosphonates on Aluminium Oxide and Hydroxide Covered Surfaces. Euradh 2008 - Adhesion '08, St Catherine's College, Oxford, UK (2008)
Özcan, Ö.; Blumenau, A. T.; Grundmeier, G.: A combined experimental-computational approach: Revealing the organosilane to zinc oxide binding mechanism. Euradh 2008 - Adhesion '08, St Catherine's College, Oxford, UK (2008)
Posner, R.; Giza, G.; Vlasak, R.; Grundmeier, G.: Electrochemical and Spectroscopic Analysis of Ion Transport Processes along Polymer/Oxide/Metal Interfaces in Corrosive and Non-Corrosive Atmosphere. Euradh 2008 - Adhesion '08, St Catherine's College, Oxford, UK (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 ‘Circular Metallurgy 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.