Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: High Temperature Corrosion: Corrosion process of stainless steels and nickel base alloys under BtE and WtE conditions. International Conference on Waste and Biomass Combustion, Michelangelo Hotel Milano, Italy (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Interim report on corrosion data: Dependence on variation of chemical environment. NextGenBioWaste, 2nd Progress Meeting 2008, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Contribution to the analysis of the corrosion process of metallic materials in incineration plants. EUROCORR 2008, EICC Edinburgh, UK (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: High Temperature Corrosion: Corrosion mechanism of candidate materials in lab-scale incineration environments. General Assembly NextGenBioWaste 2008, De Zwijger Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Corrosion and fouling data of candidate materials for WtE components: Part II. NextGenBioWaste, 1st Progress Meeting 2008, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Corrosion and fouling data of candidate materials for WtE components: Part I. NextGenBioWaste, 2nd Progress Meeting 2007, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2007)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Introduction to the Working Group NGBW. NextGenBioWaste, 1st Progress Meeting 2007, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2007)
Water electrolysis has the potential to become the major technology for the production of the high amount of green hydrogen that is necessary for its widespread application in a decarbonized economy. The bottleneck of this electrochemical reaction is the anodic partial reaction, the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), which is sluggish and hence…
This project targets to exploit or develop new methodologies to not only visualize the 3D morphology but also measure chemical distribution of as-synthesized nanostructures using atom probe tomography.
The mission of our group is to uncover the fundamental mechanisms of deformation and degradation in battery systems and to leverage mechanical principles to design damage-resilient energy storage systems.
Here the focus lies on investigating the temperature dependent deformation of material interfaces down to the individual microstructural length-scales, such as grain/phase boundaries or hetero-interfaces, to understand brittle-ductile transitions in deformation and the role of chemistry or crystallography on it.
The group aims at unraveling the inner workings of ion batteries, with a focus on probing the microstructural and interfacial character of electrodes and electrolytes that control ionic transport and insertion into the electrode.
The full potential of energy materials can only be exploited if the interplay between mechanics and chemistry at the interfaces is well known. This leads to more sustainable and efficient energy solutions.