Wang, D.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: On the role of the collinear dislocation interaction in deformation patterning and laminate formation in single crystal plasticity. Mechanics of Materials 125, pp. 70 - 79 (2018)
Diehl, M.: Review and outlook: mechanical, thermodynamic, and kinetic continuum modeling of metallic materials at the grain scale. MRS Communications 7 (4), pp. 735 - 746 (2017)
Diehl, M.; Groeber, M.; Haase, C.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Identifying Structure–Property Relationships Through DREAM.3D Representative Volume Elements and DAMASK Crystal Plasticity Simulations: An Integrated Computational Materials Engineering Approach. JOM-Journal of the Minerals Metals & Materials Society 69 (5), pp. 848 - 855 (2017)
Diehl, M.; Wicke, M.; Shanthraj, P.; Roters, F.; Brueckner-Foit, A.; Raabe, D.: Coupled Crystal Plasticity–Phase Field Fracture Simulation Study on Damage Evolution Around a Void: Pore Shape Versus Crystallographic Orientation. JOM-Journal of the Minerals Metals & Materials Society 69 (5), pp. 872 - 878 (2017)
Zhang, H.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.: A virtual laboratory using high resolution crystal plasticity simulations to determine the initial yield surface for sheet metal forming operations. International Journal of Plasticity 80, pp. 111 - 138 (2016)
Cereceda, D.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.; Perlado, J. M.; Marian, J.: Unraveling the temperature dependence of the yield strength in single-crystal tungsten using atomistically-informed crystal plasticity calcula- tions. International Journal of Plasticity 78, pp. 242 - 265 (2016)
Diehl, M.; Shanthraj, P.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.: Neighborhood influences on stress and strain partitioning in dual-phase microstructures. An investigation on synthetic polycrystals with a robust spectral-based numerical method. Meccanica 51 (2), pp. 429 - 441 (2016)
Shanthraj, P.; Eisenlohr, P.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.: Numerically robust spectral methods for crystal plasticity simulations of heterogeneous materials. International Journal of Plasticity 66, pp. 31 - 45 (2015)
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
Within this project, we will use an infra-red laser beam source based selective powder melting to fabricate copper alloy (CuCrZr) architectures. The focus will be on identifying the process parameter-microstructure-mechanical property relationships in 3-dimensional CuCrZr alloy lattice architectures, under both quasi-static and dynamic loading…
The project focuses on development and design of workflows, which enable advanced processing and analyses of various data obtained from different field ion emission microscope techniques such as field ion microscope (FIM), atom probe tomography (APT), electronic FIM (e-FIM) and time of flight enabled FIM (tof-FIM).
We plan to investigate the rate-dependent tensile properties of 2D materials such as HCP metal thin films and PbMoO4 (PMO) films by using a combination of a novel plan-view FIB based sample lift out method and a MEMS based in situ tensile testing platform inside a TEM.
The utilization of Kelvin Probe (KP) techniques for spatially resolved high sensitivity measurement of hydrogen has been a major break-through for our work on hydrogen in materials. A relatively straight forward approach was hydrogen mapping for supporting research on hydrogen embrittlement that was successfully applied on different materials, and…