Zhu, L.-F.; Körmann, F.; Chen, Q.; Selleby, M.; Neugebauer, J.; Grabowski, B.: Accelerating ab initio melting property calculations with machine learning: application to the high entropy alloy TaVCrW. npj Computational Materials 10 (1), 274 (2024)
Zhou, Y.; Srinivasan, P.; Körmann, F.; Grabowski, B.; Smith, R.; Goddard, P.; Duff, A. I.: Thermodynamics up to the melting point in a TaVCrW high entropy alloy: Systematic ab initio study aided by machine learning potentials. Physical Review B 105 (21), 214302 (2022)
Dsouza, R.; Huber, L.; Grabowski, B.; Neugebauer, J.: Approximating the impact of nuclear quantum effects on thermodynamic properties of crystalline solids by temperature remapping. Physical Review B 105 (18), 184111 (2022)
Novikov, I.; Grabowski, B.; Körmann, F.; Shapeev, A.: Magnetic Moment Tensor Potentials for collinear spin-polarized materials reproduce different magnetic states of bcc Fe. npj Computational Materials 8 (1), 13 (2022)
Zhu, L.-F.; Körmann, F.; Ruban, A. V.; Neugebauer, J.; Grabowski, B.: Performance of the standard exchange-correlation functionals in predicting melting properties fully from first principles: Application to Al and magnetic Ni. Physical Review B 101 (14), 144108 (2020)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
The Ni- and Co-based γ/γ’ superalloys are famous for their excellent high-temperature mechanical properties that result from their fine-scaled coherent microstructure of L12-ordered precipitates (γ’ phase) in an fcc solid solution matrix (γ phase). The only binary Co-based system showing this special type of microstructure is the Co-Ti system…
In this project, we employ atomistic computer simulations to study grain boundaries. Primarily, molecular dynamics simulations are used to explore their energetics and mobility in Cu- and Al-based systems in close collaboration with experimental works in the GB-CORRELATE project.
This project is a joint project of the De Magnete group and the Atom Probe Tomography group, and was initiated by MPIE’s participation in the CRC TR 270 HOMMAGE. We also benefit from additional collaborations with the “Machine-learning based data extraction from APT” project and the Defect Chemistry and Spectroscopy group.