Cao, Y. P.; Ma, D.; Raabe, D.: The use of flat punch indentation to determine the viscoelastic properties in the time and frequency domains of a soft layer bonded to a rigid substrate. Acta Biomaterialia 5 (1), pp. 240 - 248 (2009)
Cao, Y. P.; Xue, Z. Y.; Chen, X.; Raabe, D.: Correlation between the flow stress and the nominal indentation hardness of soft metals. Scripta Materialia 59, pp. 518 - 521 (2008)
Cao, Y. P.: Determination of the creep exponent of a power-law creep solid using indentation tests. Mechanics of Time-Dependent Materials 11, pp. 159 - 173 (2007)
Balasundaram, K.; Cao, Y. P.; Raabe, D.: Investigating the Applicability of the Oliver & Pharr Method to the Nano-Mechanical Characterization of Soft Matter. Gerberich Symposium, 1st International Conference from Nanoparticles and Nanomaterials to Nanodevices and Nanosystems, Halkidiki, Greece (2008)
Balasundaram, K.; Cao, Y. P.; Raabe, D.: Nanomechanics characterization of softmatter using nanoindentation. 11th GLADD Meeting, TU Gent, Belgium (2008)
Balasundaram, K.; Cao, Y. P.; Raabe, D.: Nano-mechanical Characterization of Soft Matter. Materials science Day, Mechanical Engineering Department at Ruhr-University of Bochum, Bochum, Germany (2008)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
This project aims to investigate the influence of grain boundaries on mechanical behavior at ultra-high strain rates and low temperatures. For this micropillar compressions on copper bi-crystals containing different grain boundaries will be performed.
The objective of the project is to investigate grain boundary precipitation in comparison to bulk precipitation in a model Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy during aging.
This project aims to develop a testing methodology for the nano-scale samples inside an SEM using a high-speed nanomechanical low-load sensor (nano-Newton load resolution) and high-speed dark-field differential phase contrast imaging-based scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) sensor.
Understanding hydrogen-microstructure interactions in metallic alloys and composites is a key issue in the development of low-carbon-emission energy by e.g. fuel cells, or the prevention of detrimental phenomena such as hydrogen embrittlement. We develop and test infrastructure, through in-situ nanoindentation and related techniques, to study…