Springer, H.; Baron, C.; Tanure, L.; Rohwerder, M.: A combinatorial study of the effect of Al and Cr additions on the mechanical, physical and corrosion properties of Fe. Materials Today Communications 29, 102947 (2021)
Baron, C.; Werner, H.; Springer, H.: On the effect of carbon content and tempering on mechanical properties and stiffness of martensitic Fe–18.8Cr–1.8B–xC high modulus steels. Materials Science and Engineering A: Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 809, 141000 (2021)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.: Property-Driven Development of Metallic Structural Materials by Combinatorial Techniques on the Example of Fe–C–Cr Steels. Steel Research International 90 (12), 1900404 (2019)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Development of high modulus steels based on the Fe – Cr – B system. Materials Science and Engineering A: Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 724, pp. 142 - 147 (2018)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Combinatorial screening of the microstructure–property relationships for Fe–B–X stiff, light, strong and ductile steels. Materials and Design 112, pp. 131 - 139 (2016)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Effects of Mn additions on microstructure and properties of Fe–TiB2 based high modulus steels. Materials and Design 111, pp. 185 - 191 (2016)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Efficient liquid metallurgy synthesis of Fe–TiB2 high modulus steels via in-situ reduction of titanium oxides. Materials and Design 97, pp. 357 - 363 (2016)
Springer, H.; Aparicio-Fernández, R.; Duarte, M. J.; Zhang, H.; Baron, C.; Kostka, A.; Raabe, D.: Alloy design and processing routes for novel high modulus steels. In: PTM 2015 - Proceedings of the International Conference on Solid-Solid Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials 2015, p. 981 (Eds. Chen, L.-Q.; Militzer, M.; Botton, G.; Howe, J.; Sinclair, C. W. et al.). International Conference on Solid-Solid Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials 2015, PTM 2015, Whistler, BC, Canada, June 28, 2015 - July 03, 2015. PTM 2015, Whistler, British Columbia (2015)
Baron, C.; Springer, H.; Raabe, D.: Design of cost-efficient high modulus steels as innovative lightweight materials. Advanced Composite Materials Congress, Stockholm, Sweden (2018)
About 90% of all mechanical service failures are caused by fatigue. Avoiding fatigue failure requires addressing the wide knowledge gap regarding the micromechanical processes governing damage under cyclic loading, which may be fundamentally different from that under static loading. This is particularly true for deformation-induced martensitic…
In this project we conduct together with Dr. Sandlöbes at RWTH Aachen and the department of Prof. Neugebauer ab initio calculations for designing new Mg – Li alloys. Ab initio calculations can accurately predict basic structural, mechanical, and functional properties using only the atomic composition as a basis.
The wide tunability of the fundamental electronic bandgap by size control is a key attribute of semiconductor nanocrystals, enabling applications spanning from biomedical imaging to optoelectronic devices. At finite temperature, exciton-phonon interactions are shown to exhibit a strong impact on this fundamental property.
In this project we study - together with the department of Prof. Neugebauer and Dr. Sandlöbes at RWTH Aachen - the underlying mechanisms that are responsible for the improved room-temperature ductility in Mg–Y alloys compared to pure Mg.
Efficient harvesting of sunlight and (photo-)electrochemical conversion into solar fuels is an emerging energy technology with enormous promise. Such emerging technologies depend critically on materials systems, in which the integration of dissimilar components and the internal interfaces that arise between them determine the functionality.
Oxides find broad applications as catalysts or in electronic components, however are generally brittle materials where dislocations are difficult to activate in the covalent rigid lattice. Here, the link between plasticity and fracture is critical for wide-scale application of functional oxide materials.
The project Hydrogen Embrittlement Protection Coating (HEPCO) addresses the critical aspects of hydrogen permeation and embrittlement by developing novel strategies for coating and characterizing hydrogen permeation barrier layers for valves and pumps used for hydrogen storage and transport applications.