Raabe, D.; Mattissen, D.: Experimental investigation and Ginzburg-Landau modeling of the microstructure dependence of superconductivity in Cu–Ag–Nb wires. Acta Materialia 47 (3), pp. 769 - 777 (1999)
Mattissen, D.; Raabe, D.; Heringhaus, F.: Experimental investigation and modeling of the influence of microstructure on the resistive conductivity of a Cu–Ag–Nb in situ composite. Acta Materialia 47, pp. 1627 - 1634 (1999)
Marx, V.; Raabe, D.; Engler, O.; Gottstein, G.: Simulation of the texture evolution during annealing of cold rolled BCC and FCC matals using a cellular automation approach. Textures and Microstructures 28, pp. 211 - 218 (1997)
Raabe, D.: Texture simulation for hot rolling of aluminium by use of a Taylor model considering grain interactions. Acta Metallurgica et Materialia 43 (3), pp. 1023 - 1028 (1995)
Roters, F.; Eisenlohr, P.; Bieler, T. R.; Raabe, D.: Crystal Plasticity Finite Element Methods in Materials Science and Engineering. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim (2010), 197 pp.
Janssens, K. G. F.; Raabe, D.; Kozeschnik, E.; Miodownik, M. A.; Nestler, B.: Computational Materials Engineering – An Introduction to Microstructure Evolution. Academic Press, Elsevier, USA (2007), 360 pp.
Shanthraj, P.; Diehl, M.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Spectral Solvers for Crystal Plasticity and Multi-physics Simulations. In: Handbook of Mechanics of Materials, pp. 1347 - 1372 (Eds. Hsueh, C.-H.; Schmauder, S.; Chen, C.-S.; Chawla, K. K.; Chawla, N. et al.). Springer, Singapore (2019)
Friák, M.; Raabe, D.; Neugebauer, J.: Ab Initio Guided Design of Materials. In: Structural Materials and Processes in Transportation, pp. 481 - 495 (Eds. Lehmhus, D.; Busse, M.; Herrmann, A. S.; Kayvantash, K.). Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim, Germany (2013)
Tikhovskiy, I.; Raabe, D.; Roters, F.: Anwendung der Textur-Komponenten-Kristallplastizitäts-FEM für die Simulation von Umformprozessen unter Berücksichtigung des Texturgradienten. In: Prozessskalierung, Strahltechnik, Tagungsband des 2. Kolloquiums Prozessskalierung im Rahmen des DFG Schwerpunktprogramms Prozessskalierung, Vol. 27, pp. 157 - 166 (Ed. Vollertsen, F.). BIAS-Verlag, Bremen (2005)
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials have developed a carbon-free, energy-saving method to extract nickel for batteries, magnets and stainless steel.
Max Planck scientists design a process that merges metal extraction, alloying and processing into one single, eco-friendly step. Their results are now published in the journal Nature.