Zhu, L.-F.; Janßen, J.; Grabowski, B.; Neugebauer, J.: Melting parameters from ab initio using the fast statistical sampling TOR-TILD approach: Applications to Al and Ni. CALPHAD XLVIII CONFERENCE, Singapore, Singapore (2019)
Todorova, M.; Yoo, S.-H.; Surendralal, S.; Neugebauer, J.: A fully ab initio approach to modelling electrochemical solid/liquid interfaces. Chemiekolloquium der Johannes Kepler Universität Linz, Linz, Austria (2019)
Neugebauer, J.: Automizing work flows in computational materials design. Traceability and securing of results as essential challenges of research in the digital age, Berlin, Germany (2019)
Tehranchi, A.; Hickel, T.; Neugebauer, J.: Atomistic simulations of hydrogen-defect interactions in metals. Workshop "Hydrogen in Metals - current understanding and future needs", St Anne's College, Oxford, UK (2019)
Todorova, M.; Surendralal, S.; Neugebauer, J.: First-principles approach to model electrochemical reactions at the solid-liquid interface. Spring Meeting of the German Physical Society (DPG 2019), Regensburg, Germany (2019)
Ikeda, Y.; Körmann, F.; Neugebauer, J.: Impact of Interstitial Alloying of High Entropy Alloys from First Principles. TMS 2019, San Antonio, TX, USA (2019)
Neugebauer, J.; Todorova, M.; Grabowski, B.; Hickel, T.: Modelling structural materials in realistic environments by ab initio thermodynamics. Hume-Rothery Award Symposium, TMS2019 Annual Meeting and Exhibition, San Antonio, TX, USA (2019)
Hickel, T.; Zendegani, A.; Körmann, F.; Neugebauer, J.: Energetics of non-stoichiometric stacking faults in Fe–Nb alloys: An ab initio study. TMS 2019 Annual Meeting, San Antonio, TX, USA (2019)
Neugebauer, J.; Surendralal, S.; Todorova, M.: Extending First-Principles Calculations to Model Electrochemical Reactions at the Solid-Liquid Interface. Towards Reality in Nanoscale Materials X, Levi, Finnland (2019)
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
Crystal Plasticity (CP) modeling [1] is a powerful and well established computational materials science tool to investigate mechanical structure–property relations in crystalline materials. It has been successfully applied to study diverse micromechanical phenomena ranging from strain hardening in single crystals to texture evolution in…
Complex simulation protocols combine distinctly different computer codes and have to run on heterogeneous computer architectures. To enable these complex simulation protocols, the CM department has developed pyiron.
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…
Atom probe tomography (APT) provides three dimensional(3D) chemical mapping of materials at sub nanometer spatial resolution. In this project, we develop machine-learning tools to facilitate the microstructure analysis of APT data sets in a well-controlled way.