Springer, H.; Belde, M. M.; Raabe, D.: Combinatorial design of transitory constitution steels: Coupling high strength with inherent formability and weldability through sequenced austenite stability. Materials and Design 90, pp. 1100 - 1109 (2016)
Gutiérrez-Urrutia, I.; Archie, F. M. F.; Raabe, D.; Yan, F.; Tao, N.-R.; Lu, K.: Plastic accommodation at homophase interfaces between nanotwinned and recrystallized grains in an austenitic duplex-microstructured steel. Science and Technology of Advanced Materials 17 (1), pp. 29 - 36 (2016)
Kovács, A.; Pradeep, K. G.; Herzer, G.; Raabe, D.; Dunin-Borkowski, R. E.: Magnetic microstructure in a stress-annealed Fe73.5Si15.5B7Nb3Cu1 soft magnetic alloy observed using off-axis electron holography and Lorentz microscopy. AIP Advances 6 (5), 056501 (2016)
Li, Y.; Herbig, M.; Goto, S.; Raabe, D.: Formation of nanosized grain structure in martensitic 100Cr6 bearing steels upon rolling contact loading studied by atom probe tomography. Materials Science and Technology 32 (11), pp. 1100 - 1105 (2016)
Timokhina, I. B.; Liss, K.-D.; Raabe, D.; Rakha, K.; Beladi, H.; Xiong, X.; Hodgson, P. D.: Growth of bainitic ferrite and carbon partitioning during the early stages of bainite transformation in a 2 mass silicon steel studied by in situ neutron diffraction, TEM and APT. Journal of Applied Crystallography 49, pp. 399 - 414 (2016)
Pradeep, K. G.; Herzer, G.; Raabe, D.: Atomic scale study of CU clustering and pseudo-homogeneous Fe-Si nanocrystallization in soft magnetic FeSiNbB(CU) alloys. Ultramicroscopy 159 (2), pp. 285 - 291 (2015)
Stoffers, A.; Cojocaru-Mirédin, O.; Seifert, W.; Zaefferer, S.; Riepe, S.; Raabe, D.: Grain boundary segregation in multicrystalline silicon: correlative characterization by EBSD, EBIC, and atom probe tomography. Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications 23 (12), pp. 1742 - 1753 (2015)
Pradeep, K. G.; Tasan, C. C.; Yao, M.; Deng, Y.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Non-equiatomic high entropy alloys: Approach towards rapid alloy screening and property-oriented design. Materials Science and Engineering A: Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 648, pp. 183 - 192 (2015)
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.
Start of a collaborative research project on the sustainable production of manganese and its alloys being funded by European Union with 7 million euros
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science