Gault, B.; Shoji Aota, L.; Krämer, M.; Kim, S.-H.: From impurity ingress to high-performance doping: A perspective on atom probe tomography in energy materials. Scripta Materialia 262, 116648 (2025)
Sandim, M. J. R.; Nagamine, L. C. M.; Kwiatkowski da Silva, A.; Aota, L. S.; Han, L.; Cohen, R.; Zschommler Sandim, H. R.; Gault, B.; Souza Filho, I. R.: Anomalous magnetization induced by local chemistry fluctuations in Mn-containing a'-martensite. Acta Materialia 272, 119956 (2024)
Lyrio, M. S.; Shoji Aota, L.; Sandim, M. J. R.; Sandim, H. R. Z.: Additive manufacturing of Fe-3.5 wt.-%Si electrical steel via laser powder bed fusion and subsequent thermomechanical processing. Journal of Materials Science 59 (9), pp. 4019 - 4038 (2024)
Yoo, S.-H.; Aota, L. S.; Shin, S.; El-Zoka, A. A.; Kang, P. W.; Lee, Y.; Lee, H.; Kim, S.-H.; Gault, B.: Dopant Evolution in Electrocatalysts after Hydrogen Oxidation Reaction in an Alkaline Environment. ACS Energy Letters 8 (8), pp. 3381 - 3386 (2023)
Aota, L. S.; Jung, C.; Zhang, S.; Kim, S.-H.; Gault, B.: Revealing Compositional Evolution of PdAu Electrocatalyst by Atom Probe Tomography. ACS Energy Letters 8 (6), pp. 2824 - 2830 (2023)
Harada, A. T.; Zanni, E. G. S.; Aota, L. S.; Zilnyk, K. D.; Lima, M. S. F.; Abdalla, A. J.: Mechanical Properties of Laser Beam Welded Dissimilar High Strength Steels: 300M and DP 780. Materials Research-Ibero-American Journal of Materials 26 (1), e20230089 (2023)
Mota, C. F. G. S.; Aota, L. S.; Sandim, H. R. Z.; Zilnyk, K. D.; Sandim, M. J. R.: Austenite reversion in lean duplex steel: Microstructural, dilatometric and magnetic characterization. Materials Characterization 195, 112509 (2023)
Singh, M. P.; Woods, E.; Kim, S.-H.; Jung, C.; Aota, L. S.; Gault, B.: Facilitating the Systematic Nanoscale Study of Battery Materials by Atom Probe Tomography through in-situ Metal Coating. Batteries & Supercaps 7 (2), e202300403 (2023)
If manganese nodules can be mined in an environmentally friendly way, the critical metals needed for the energy transition could be produced with low CO2 emissions
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials have developed a carbon-free, energy-saving method to extract nickel for batteries, magnets and stainless steel.
Max Planck scientists design a process that merges metal extraction, alloying and processing into one single, eco-friendly step. Their results are now published in the journal Nature.