Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.; Kords, C.; Diehl, M.; Lebensohn, R.A.; Raabe, D.: Combining characterization and simulation of grain-scale plasticity in three dimensions. EBSD Conference 2011 of the Royal Microscopical Society, Düsseldorf, Germany (2011)
Roters, F.; Eisenlohr, P.; Tjahjanto, D. D.; Kords, C.; Raabe, D.: A modular crystal plasticity framework applicable from component to single grain scale. IUTAM Symposium Linking Scales in Computations: From Microstructure to Macro-scale Properties, Pensacola, FL, USA (2011)
Eisenlohr, P.; Kords, C.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: How to capture mesoscale plastic strain gradient effects in a physical way -- a look at dislocation mechanics and computational aspects. MST Symposium, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA (2011)
Eisenlohr, P.; Kords, C.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: A non-local constitutitve hardening model based on polar dislocation densities. IV European Conf. Comp. Mech. ECCM 2010, Paris, France (2010)
Eisenlohr, P.; Kords, C.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: A non-local crystal plasticity model based on polar dislocation densities. 16th Int. Symp. on Plasticity and Its Current Applications, St. Kitts, St. Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis (2010)
Kords, C.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.: Signed dislocation densities and their spatial gradients as basis for a nonlocal crystal plasticity model. MMM 2010 Fifth International Conference Multiscale Materials Modeling, Freiburg, Germany (2010)
Kords, C.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.: A Non-Local Dislocation Density Based Constitutive Model for Crystal Plasticity. Junior Euromat 2010, Lausanne, Switzerland (2010)
Kords, C.: On the role of dislocation transport in the constitutive description of crystal plasticity. Dissertation, RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany (2013)
Hydrogen in aluminium can cause embrittlement and critical failure. However, the behaviour of hydrogen in aluminium was not yet understood. Scientists at the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung were able to locate hydrogen inside aluminium’s microstructure and designed strategies to trap the hydrogen atoms inside the microstructure. This can…
This project aims to investigate the influence of grain boundaries on mechanical behavior at ultra-high strain rates and low temperatures. For this micropillar compressions on copper bi-crystals containing different grain boundaries will be performed.
Microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) of iron by marine sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB) is studied electrochemically and surfaces of corroded samples have been investigated in a long-term project.
In this project we investigate the hydrogen distribution and desorption behavior in an electrochemically hydrogen-charged binary Ni-Nb model alloy. The aim is to study the role of the delta phase in hydrogen embrittlement of the Ni-base alloy 718.
We plan to investigate the rate-dependent tensile properties of 2D materials such as metal thin films and PbMoO4 (PMO) films by using a combination of a novel plan-view FIB based sample lift out method and a MEMS based in situ tensile testing platform inside a TEM.
Hydrogen induced embrittlement of metals is one of the long standing unresolved problems in Materials Science. A hierarchical multiscale approach is used to investigate the underlying atomistic mechanisms.
For understanding the underlying hydrogen embrittlement mechanism in transformation-induced plasticity steels, the process of damage evolution in a model austenite/martensite dual-phase microstructure following hydrogenation was investigated through multi-scale electron channelling contrast imaging and in situ optical microscopy.
We will investigate the electrothermomechanical response of individual metallic nanowires as a function of microstructural interfaces from the growth processes. This will be accomplished using in situ SEM 4-point probe-based electrical resistivity measurements and 2-point probe-based impedance measurements, as a function of mechanical strain and…
The project aims to study corrosion, a detrimental process with an enormous impact on global economy, by combining denstiy-functional theory calculations with thermodynamic concepts.