Springer, H.; Baron, C.; Tanure, L.; Rohwerder, M.: A combinatorial study of the effect of Al and Cr additions on the mechanical, physical and corrosion properties of Fe. Materials Today Communications 29, 102947 (2021)
Baron, C.; Werner, H.; Springer, H.: On the effect of carbon content and tempering on mechanical properties and stiffness of martensitic Fe–18.8Cr–1.8B–xC high modulus steels. Materials Science and Engineering A: Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 809, 141000 (2021)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.: Property-Driven Development of Metallic Structural Materials by Combinatorial Techniques on the Example of Fe–C–Cr Steels. Steel Research International 90 (12), 1900404 (2019)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Development of high modulus steels based on the Fe – Cr – B system. Materials Science and Engineering A: Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 724, pp. 142 - 147 (2018)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Combinatorial screening of the microstructure–property relationships for Fe–B–X stiff, light, strong and ductile steels. Materials and Design 112, pp. 131 - 139 (2016)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Effects of Mn additions on microstructure and properties of Fe–TiB2 based high modulus steels. Materials and Design 111, pp. 185 - 191 (2016)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Efficient liquid metallurgy synthesis of Fe–TiB2 high modulus steels via in-situ reduction of titanium oxides. Materials and Design 97, pp. 357 - 363 (2016)
Springer, H.; Aparicio-Fernández, R.; Duarte, M. J.; Zhang, H.; Baron, C.; Kostka, A.; Raabe, D.: Alloy design and processing routes for novel high modulus steels. In: PTM 2015 - Proceedings of the International Conference on Solid-Solid Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials 2015, p. 981 (Eds. Chen, L.-Q.; Militzer, M.; Botton, G.; Howe, J.; Sinclair, C. W. et al.). International Conference on Solid-Solid Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials 2015, PTM 2015, Whistler, BC, Canada, June 28, 2015 - July 03, 2015. PTM 2015, Whistler, British Columbia (2015)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Design of cost-efficient high modulus steels as innovative lightweight materials. Advanced Composite Materials Congress, Stockholm, Sweden (2018)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
In this project, we aim to design novel NiCoCr-based medium entropy alloys (MEAs) and further enhance their mechanical properties by tuning the multiscale heterogeneous composite structures. This is being achieved by alloying of varying elements in the NiCoCr matrix and appropriate thermal-mechanical processing.
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.
Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) is the most commonly used Additive Manufacturing processes. One of its biggest advantages it offers is to exploit its inherent specific process characteristics, namely the decoupling the solidification rate from the parts´volume, for novel materials with superior physical and mechanical properties. One prominet…
This project studies the mechanical properties and microstructural evolution of a transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP)-assisted interstitial high-entropy alloy (iHEA) with a nominal composition of Fe49.5Mn30Co10Cr10C0.5 (at. %) at cryogenic temperature (77 K). We aim to understand the hardening behavior of the iHEA at 77 K, and hence guide the future design of advanced HEA for cryogenic applications.