Tan, A. M. Z.; Freysoldt, C.; Hennig, R. G.: First-principles investigation of charged dopants and dopant-vacancy defect complexes in monolayer MoS2. Physical Review Materials 4 (11), 114002 (2020)
Tan, A. M. Z.; Freysoldt, C.; Hennig, R. G.: Stability of charged sulfur vacancies in 2D and bulk MoS2 from plane-wave density functional theory with electrostatic corrections. Physical Review Materials 4 (6), 064004 (2020)
Freysoldt, C.; Neugebauer, J.: First-principles calculations for charged defects at surfaces, interfaces, and two-dimensional materials in the presence of electric fields. Physical Review B 97 (20), 205425 (2018)
Wang, J.; Freysoldt, C.; Du, Y.; Sun, L.: First-Principles study of intrinsic defects in ammonia borane. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 121 (41), pp. 22680 - 22689 (2017)
Freysoldt, C.: On-the-fly parameterization of internal coordinate force constants for quasi-Newton geometry optimization in atomistic calculations. Computational Materials Science 133, pp. 71 - 81 (2017)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
The key to the design and construction of advanced materials with tailored mechanical properties is nano- and micro-scale plasticity. Significant influence also exists in shaping the mechanical behavior of materials on small length scales.
This project aims to correlate the localised electrical properties of ceramic materials and the defects present within their microstructure. A systematic approach has been developed to create crack-free deformation in oxides through nanoindentation, while the localised defects are probed in-situ SEM to study the electronic properties. A coupling…
This project endeavours to offer comprehensive insights into GB phases and their mechanical responses within both pure Ni and Ni-X (X=Cu, Au, Nb) solid solutions. The outcomes of this research will contribute to the development of mechanism-property diagrams, guiding material design and optimization strategies for various applications.
By using the DAMASK simulation package we developed a new approach to predict the evolution of anisotropic yield functions by coupling large scale forming simulations directly with crystal plasticity-spectral based virtual experiments, realizing a multi-scale model for metal forming.