Bhat, M. K.; Frommeyer, L.; Prithiv, T. S.; Dehm, G.; Best, J. P.: Using small-scale mechanics to probe the origins of segregation-induced strengthening. Nanomechanical Testing in Materials Research and Development VIII, Split, Croatia (2022)
Devulapalli, V.; Hans, M.; Prithiv, T. S.; Schneider, J. M.; Dehm, G.; Liebscher, C.: Unravelling the atomic structure and segregation of Ʃ13 [0001] tilt grain boundaries in titanium by advanced STEM. Microscopy Conference 2021 & Multinational Conference on Microscopy 2021, Vienna, Austria (2021)
Prithiv, T. S.: Grain boundary segregation of boron and carbon and their local chemical effects on the phase transformations in steels. Dissertation, Faculty of Georesources and Materials Engineering of the RWTH Aachen, Germany (2021)
Scientists of the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung pioneer new machine learning model for corrosion-resistant alloy design. Their results are now published in the journal Science Advances
Integrated Computational Materials Engineering (ICME) is one of the emerging hot topics in Computational Materials Simulation during the last years. It aims at the integration of simulation tools at different length scales and along the processing chain to predict and optimize final component properties.
Data-rich experiments such as scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) provide large amounts of multi-dimensional raw data that encodes, via correlations or hierarchical patterns, much of the underlying materials physics. With modern instrumentation, data generation tends to be faster than human analysis, and the full information content is…
The project’s goal is to synergize experimental phase transformations dynamics, observed via scanning transmission electron microscopy, with phase-field models that will enable us to learn the continuum description of complex material systems directly from experiment.
In order to prepare raw data from scanning transmission electron microscopy for analysis, pattern detection algorithms are developed that allow to identify automatically higher-order feature such as crystalline grains, lattice defects, etc. from atomically resolved measurements.