Swaminathan, S.; Spiegel, M.; Rohwerder, M.: Effect of annealing conditions on the selective oxidation of quarternary model alloy. 4th International Conference on Diffusion in Solids and Liquids, Barcelona, Spain (2008)
Swaminathan, S.; Koll, T.; Pohl, M.; Spiegel, M.: Hot-dip galvanizing simulation of model alloys and industrial steel grades: Correlation between surface chemistry and wettability. GALVATECH `07, 7th International Conference on Zinc and Zinc Alloy Coated Steel Sheet, Osaka, Japan (2007)
Swaminathan, S.; Spiegel, M.: Effect of alloy composition on the selective oxidation of ternary Fe–Si–Cr, Fe–Mn–Cr model alloys. ECASIA 2007, 12th European Conference on Applications of Surface and Interface Analysis, Brussels-Flggey, Belgium (2007)
Auinger, M.; Swaminathan, S.; Rohwerder, M.: The Influence of Oxide Formation on the Diffusion Properties in Iron Alloys - The Thermogravimetric Behaviour in Early Stages of Oxidation. Gordon-Kenan Research Seminar on High Temperature Corrosion and Gordon-Research Conference on High Temperature Corrosion, New London, NH, USA (2011)
Vogel, D.; Swaminathan, S.; Rohwerder, M.; Renner, F. U.: Possibilities for high-temperature corrosion at MPIE. International Symposium on High-temperature Oxidation and Corrosion, Zushi, Japan (2010)
Vogel, A.; Swaminathan, S.; Vogel, D.; Rohwerder, M.: Novel Setup for Metal/Gas Reactions at High Temperature. 6th International Conference on Diffusion in Solids and Liquids: Mass Transfer, Heat Transfer and Microstructure and Properties, Paris, France (2010)
Swaminathan, S.: Selective surface oxidation and segregation upon short term annealing of model alloys and industrial steel grades. Dissertation, Ruhr-Universität, Fakultät für Physik und Astronomie, Bochum, Germany (2007)
Hydrogen in aluminium can cause embrittlement and critical failure. However, the behaviour of hydrogen in aluminium was not yet understood. Scientists at the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung were able to locate hydrogen inside aluminium’s microstructure and designed strategies to trap the hydrogen atoms inside the microstructure. This can…
With the support of DFG, in this project the interaction of H with mechanical, chemical and electrochemical properties in ferritic Fe-based alloys is investigated by the means of in-situ nanoindentation, which can characterize the mechanical behavior of independent features within a material upon the simultaneous charge of H.
This project will aim at addressing the specific knowledge gap of experimental data on the mechanical behavior of microscale samples at ultra-short-time scales by the development of testing platforms capable of conducting quantitative micromechanical testing under extreme strain rates upto 10000/s and beyond.
The aim of the current study is to investigate electrochemical corrosion mechanisms by examining the metal-liquid nanointerfaces. To achieve this, corrosive fluids will be strategically trapped within metal structures using novel additive micro fabrication techniques. Subsequently, the nanointerfaces will be analyzed using cryo-atom probe…
Hydrogen embrittlement (HE) of steel is a great challenge in engineering applications. However, the HE mechanisms are not fully understood. Conventional studies of HE are mostly based on post mortem observations of the microstructure evolution and those results can be misleading due to intermediate H diffusion. Therefore, experiments with a…
The goal of this project is the investigation of interplay between the atomic-scale chemistry and the strain rate in affecting the deformation response of Zr-based BMGs. Of special interest are the shear transformation zone nucleation in the elastic regime and the shear band propagation in the plastic regime of BMGs.
“Smaller is stronger” is well known in micromechanics, but the properties far from the quasi-static regime and the nominal temperatures remain unexplored. This research will bridge this gap on how materials behave under the extreme conditions of strain rate and temperature, to enhance fundamental understanding of their deformation mechanisms. The…