Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Fundamental studies on alkali chloride induced corrosion during combustion of biomass. Materials Science Forum 461–464, p. 1055 - 1055 (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Studies on the local reactions of thermophoretic deposited alkali chloride particles on metal surfaces. In: NACE CORROSION‘ 04, 04533. NACE CORROSION‘ 04, New Orleans, LA, USA. (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Local reaction between NaCl and KCl particles and metal surfaces. In: Proceedings of EUROCORR '04, 1. Proceedings of EUROCORR '04, Nice, France, 2004. (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Studies on the local reactions of thermophoretic deposited alkali chloride particles on iron surfaces. NACE CORROSION‘ 04, New Orleans, LA, USA (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Local reactions of KCl particles with Fe, Ni and Cr surfaces. EFC Workshop: Novel approaches to the improvement of high temperature corrosion resistance, DECHEMA, Frankfurt, Germany (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Spiegel, M.: Fundamental studies on alkali chloride induced corrosion during combustion of biomass. 6th Int. Symposium on High temperature Corrosion and Protection of Materials, Lez Embiez, France (2004)
Cha, S. C.; Vogel, D.; Spiegel, M.: Fundamental studies on alkali chloride induced corrosion during combustion of biomass. 18. Stahlkolloquium, Eurogress Aachen, Aachen, Germany (2003)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
In this project, we employ atomistic computer simulations to study grain boundaries. Primarily, molecular dynamics simulations are used to explore their energetics and mobility in Cu- and Al-based systems in close collaboration with experimental works in the GB-CORRELATE project.
This project is a joint project of the De Magnete group and the Atom Probe Tomography group, and was initiated by MPIE’s participation in the CRC TR 270 HOMMAGE. We also benefit from additional collaborations with the “Machine-learning based data extraction from APT” project and the Defect Chemistry and Spectroscopy group.
In this project, we aim to design novel NiCoCr-based medium entropy alloys (MEAs) and further enhance their mechanical properties by tuning the multiscale heterogeneous composite structures. This is being achieved by alloying of varying elements in the NiCoCr matrix and appropriate thermal-mechanical processing.