Li, Y.; Choi, P.-P.; Goto, S.; Borchers, C.; Raabe, D.; Kirchheim, R.: Atomic scale investigation of redistribution of alloying elements in pearlitic steel wires upon cold-drawing and annealing. Ultramicroscopy 132, pp. 233 - 238 (2013)
Chen, Y. Z.; Herz, A.; Li, Y. J.; Borchers, C.; Choi, P.; Raabe, D.; Kirchheim, R.: Nanocrystalline Fe–C alloys produced by ball milling of iron and graphite. Acta Materialia 61 (9), pp. 3172 - 3185 (2013)
Peranio, N.; Li, Y. J.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Microstructure and texture evolution in dual-phase steels: Competition between recovery, recrystallization, and phase transformation. Materials Science and Engineering A 527 (16-17), pp. 4161 - 4168 (2010)
Blum, W.; Li, Y. J.; Durst, K.: Stability of ultrafine-grained Cu to subgrain coarsening and recrystallization in annealing and deformation at elevated temperatures. Acta Materialia 57, pp. 5207 - 5217 (2009)
Peng, Z.; Gault, B.; Raabe, D.; Ashton, M. W.; Sinnott, S. B.; Choi, P.-P.; Li, Y.: On the Multiple Event Detection in Atom Probe Tomography. In: MicroscopyMicroanalysis, Vol. 23, pp. 618 - 619. Microscopy & Microanalysis 2017, St. Louis, MO, USA, August 06, 2017 - August 10, 2017. (2017)
Morsdorf, L.; Mayweg, D.; Li, Y.; Diederichs, A.; Raabe, D.; Herbig, M.: Moving cracks and missing C atoms – chasing the mysteries of white etching areas in bearings. 2nd meeting of "Metallurgical Metallurgy for Plasticity-driven Damage and Fracture" research forum 2021 (ISIJ), virtual (2021)
Herbig, M.; Parra, C.D.; Lu, W.; Toji, Y.; Liebscher, C.; Li, Y.; Goto, S.; Dehm, G.; Raabe, D.: Where does the carbon atom go in steel? – Insights gained by correlative transmission electron microscopy and atom probe tomography. International Symposium on Steel Science 2017, Kyoto, Japan (2017)
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
The aim of the work is to develop instrumentation, methodology and protocols to extract the dynamic strength and hardness of micro-/nano- scale materials at high strain rates using an in situ nanomechanical tester capable of indentation up to constant strain rates of up to 100000 s−1.