Grabke, H. J.; Spiegel, M.; Zahs, A.: Role of Alloying Elements and Carbides in the Chlorine-induced Corrosion of Steels and Alloys. Materials Research 7 (1), pp. 89 - 95 (2004)
Spiegel, M.; Zahs, A.; Grabke, H. J.: Fundamental aspects of chlorine induced corrosion in power plants. Materials at High Temperatures 20, 2, pp. 153 - 159 (2003)
Spiegel, M.; Zahs, A.; Grabke, H. J.: The role of alloying elements on the corrosion in oxidizing and chloridizing gases. In: Corrosion 2001, pp. 1 - 10. Corrosion 2001, Houston, Texas, USA, 2001. (2002)
Spiegel, M.; Zahs, A.; Grabke, H. J.: Fundamental aspects of chlorine induced corrosion in power plants. Invited lecture on the Workshop: ‘Life cycle issues in advanced energy systems’, Woburn, UK (2002)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
Titanium and its alloys are widely used in critical applications due to their low density, high specific strength, and excellent corrosion resistance, but their poor plasticity at room temperature limits broader utilization. Introducing hydrogen as a temporary alloying element has been shown to improve plasticity during high-temperature processing…
This project targets to exploit or develop new methodologies to not only visualize the 3D morphology but also measure chemical distribution of as-synthesized nanostructures using atom probe tomography.
Project C3 of the SFB/TR103 investigates high-temperature dislocation-dislocation and dislocation-precipitate interactions in the gamma/gamma-prime microstructure of Ni-base superalloys.
Statistical significance in materials science is a challenge that has been trying to overcome by miniaturization. However, this process is still limited to 4-5 tests per parameter variance, i.e. Size, orientation, grain size, composition, etc. as the process of fabricating pillars and testing has to be done one by one. With this project, we aim to…