Ostertag, L. M.; Utzig, T.; Klinger, C.; Valtiner, M.: Tether-Length Dependence of Bias in Equilibrium Free-Energy Estimates for Surface-to-Molecule Unbinding Experiments. Langmuir 34 (3), pp. 766 - 772 (2018)
Stock, P.; Utzig, T.; Valtiner, M.: Soft matter interactions at the molecular scale: interaction forces and energies between single hydrophobic model peptides. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 19 (6), pp. 4216 - 4221 (2017)
Utzig, T.; Stock, P.; Valtiner, M.: Resolving Non-Specific and Specific Adhesive Interactions of Catechols at Solid/Liquid Interfaces at the Molecular Scale. Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 55, pp. 9524 - 9528 (2016)
Utzig, T.; Stock, P.; Valtiner, M.: Resolving Non-Specific and Specific Adhesive Interactions of Catechols at Solid/Liquid Interfaces at the Molecular Scale. Angewandte Chemie 128, pp. 9676 - 9680 (2016)
Utzig, T.; Stock, P.; Raman, S.; Valtiner, M.: Targeted Tuning of Interactive Forces by Engineering of Molecular Bonds in Series and Parallel Using Peptide-Based Adhesives. Langmuir 31 (40), pp. 11051 - 11057 (2015)
Stock, P.; Utzig, T.; Valtiner, M.: Direct and quantitative AFM measurements of the concentration and temperature dependence of the hydrophobic force law at nanoscopic contacts. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 446, pp. 244 - 251 (2015)
Utzig, T.; Raman, S.; Valtiner, M.: Scaling from Single Molecule to Macroscopic Adhesion at Polymer/Metal Interfaces. Langmuir 31 (9), pp. 2722 - 2729 (2015)
Hu, Q.; Cheng, H.-W.; Stock, P.; Utzig, T.; Shrestha, B. R.; Valtiner, M.: Elucidating the structure of solid/electrolyte interfaces - Force probe experiments at hydrophilic, hydrophobic and electrified aqueous as well as ionic liquid|electrode interfaces. Bunsenmagazin 2, pp. 49 - 55 (2015)
Cheng, H.-W.; Utzig, T.; Valtiner, M.: Using a Surface-Forces-Apparatus to measure force distance profiles across confined ionic liquids. Application Note – Spectrographs (Andor) (2014)
Utzig, T.: A contribution to understanding interfacial adhesion based on molecular level knowledge. Dissertation, Fakultät für Maschinenbau, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany (2016)
In this project, we aim to achieve an atomic scale understanding about the structure and phase transformation process in the dual-phase high-entropy alloys (HEAs) with transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) effect. Aberration-corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques are being applied ...
The aim of this project is to correlate the point defect structure of Fe1-xO to its mechanical, electrical and catalytic properties. Systematic stoichiometric variation of magnetron-sputtered Fe1-xO thin films are investigated regarding structural analysis by transition electron microscopy (TEM) and spectroscopy methods, which can reveal the defect…
Nickel-based alloys are a particularly interesting class of materials due to their specific properties such as high-temperature strength, low-temperature ductility and toughness, oxidation resistance, hot-corrosion resistance, and weldability, becoming potential candidates for high-performance components that require corrosion resistance and good…
In this project, we investigate the phase transformation and twinning mechanisms in a typical interstitial high-entropy alloy (iHEA) via in-situ and interrupted in-situ tensile testing ...
Femtosecond laser pulse sequences offer a way to explore the ultrafast dynamics of charge density waves. Designing specific pulse sequences may allow us to guide the system's trajectory through the potential energy surface and achieve precise control over processes at surfaces.
The aim of this project is to develop novel nanostructured Fe-Co-Ti-X (X = Si, Ge, Sn) compositionally complex alloys (CCAs) with adjustable magnetic properties by tailoring microstructure and phase constituents through compositional and process tuning. The key aspect of this work is to build a fundamental understanding of the correlation between…
In this project, we employ a metastability-engineering strategy to design bulk high-entropy alloys (HEAs) with multiple compositionally equivalent high-entropy phases.
Solitonic excitations with topological properties in charge density waves may be used as information carriers in novel types of information processing.