Bieler, T. R.; Crimp, M. A.; Yang, Y.; Wang, L.; Eisenlohr, P.; Mason, D. E.; Liu, W.; Ice, G. E.: Strain Heterogeneity and Damage Nucleation at Grain Boundaries during Monotonic Deformation in Commercial Purity Titanium. Journal of Microscopy 61 (12), pp. 45 - 52 (2009)
Bieler, T. R.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.; Kumar, D.; Mason, D. E.; Crimp, M. A.; Raabe, D.: The role of heterogeneous deformation on damage nucleation at grain boundaries in single phase metals. International Journal of Plasticity 25 (9), pp. 1655 - 1683 (2009)
Eisenlohr, P.; Milička, K.; Blum, W.: Dislocation glide velocity in creep of Mg-alloys derived from dip tests. Materials Science and Engineering A 510-511, pp. 393 - 397 (2009)
Eisenlohr, P.; Tjahjanto, D. D.; Hochrainer, T.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Comparison of texture evolution in fcc metals predicted by various grain cluster homogenization schemes. International Journal of Materials Research 100 (4), pp. 500 - 509 (2009)
Kumar, P.; Kassner, M. E.; Blum, W.; Eisenlohr, P.; Langdon, T. G.: New observations on high-temperature creep at very low stresses. Materials Science and Engineering A 510-511, pp. 20 - 24 (2009)
Eisenlohr, P.; Sadrabadi, P.; Blum, W.: Quantifying the distributions of dislocation spacings and cell sizes. Journal of Materials Science 43, pp. 2700 - 2707 (2008)
Kumar, D.; Bieler, T. R.; Eisenlohr, P.; Mason, D. E.; Crimp, M. A.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: On Predicting Nucleation of Microcracks Due to Slip-Twin Interactions at Grain Boundaries in Duplex gamma-TiAl. Journal of Engineering and Materials Technology 130 (02), pp. 021012-1 - 021012-12 (2008)
Zeng, X. H.; Eisenlohr, P.; Blum, W.: Modelling the transition from strengthening to softening due to grain boundaries. Material Science and Engineering A 483-484, pp. 95 - 98 (2008)
Tjahjanto, D. D.; Roters, F.; Eisenlohr, P.: Iso-Work-Rate Weighted-Taylor Homogenization Scheme for Multiphase Steels Assisted by Transformation-induced Plasticity Effect. Steel Research International 78 (10/11), pp. 777 - 783 (2007)
Eisenlohr, P.; Blum, W.: Bridging steady-state deformation behavior at low and high temperature by considering dislocation dipole annihilation. Material Science and Engineering A 400 - 401, pp. 175 - 181 (2005)
Eisenlohr, P.; Winning, M.; Blum, W.: Migration of subgrain boundaries under stress in bi- and multi-granular structures. Physica Status Solidi 200 (2), pp. 339 - 345 (2003)
Roters, F.; Eisenlohr, P.; Bieler, T. R.; Raabe, D.: Crystal Plasticity Finite Element Methods in Materials Science and Engineering. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim (2010), 197 pp.
Shanthraj, P.; Diehl, M.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Spectral Solvers for Crystal Plasticity and Multi-physics Simulations. In: Handbook of Mechanics of Materials, pp. 1347 - 1372 (Eds. Hsueh, C.-H.; Schmauder, S.; Chen, C.-S.; Chawla, K. K.; Chawla, N. et al.). Springer, Singapore (2019)
Max Planck scientists design a process that merges metal extraction, alloying and processing into one single, eco-friendly step. Their results are now published in the journal Nature.
Scientists of the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung pioneer new machine learning model for corrosion-resistant alloy design. Their results are now published in the journal Science Advances
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…
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…
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.