Fabritius, H.-O.; Enax, J.; Wu, X.; Epple, M.; Raabe, D.: Structure-property relations in biological composite materials: An inspiration source for synthetic materials. 79th Annual Meeting of the DPG and DPG Spring Meeting 2015, Berlin, Germany (2015)
Fabritius, H.-O.: Alternative Präparationsmethoden für nichtmetallische Werkstoffe. Fachtagung Mikroskopie und Präparation (mikpräp) der Gesellschaft für Materialografie Rhein Ruhr e.V. (gmr2), Solingen, Germany (2015)
Fabritius, H.-O.: Structure-property relations in biological composite materials – The arthropod exoskeleton. Chemical Engineering and Materials Science Seminar, Michigan State University, East Lensing, MI, USA (2014)
Enax, J.; Fabritius, H.-O.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.; Epple, M.: Synthetic dental composite materials inspired by the hierarchical organization of shark tooth enameloid. Third winter school within the DFG priority programme 1420 "Biomimetic Materials Research: Functionality by Hierarchical Structuring of Materials", Potsdam, Germany (2014)
Huber, J.; Fabritius, H.-O.; Griesshaber, E.; Schmahl, W. W.; Ziegler, A. S.: Varying mechanical properties within the incisive cuticle of the terrestrial isopod Porcellio scaber resulting from region-dependent ultrastructure, elemental distribution and arrangement of calcite crystals. DGM Bio-inspired Materials: International Conference on Biological Material Science, Potsdam, Germany (2014)
Fabritius, H.-O.: Structure-property relations in biological composite materials. Seminar, Department of Earth- and Environmental Sciences, LMU Munich, München, Germany (2014)
Fabritius, H.-O.; Hennig, S.; Hild, S.; Soor, C.; Ziegler, A. S.: Influence of Near-Physiological Salines and Organic Matrix Proteins from Sternal ACC-Deposits of Porcellio scaber on CaCO3 Precipitation. 12th International Symposium on Biomineralization, Freiberg, Germany (2013)
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
A novel design with independent tip and sample heating is developed to characterize materials at high temperatures. This design is realized by modifying a displacement controlled room temperature micro straining rig with addition of two miniature hot stages.
Many important phenomena occurring in polycrystalline materials under large plastic strain, like microstructure, deformation localization and in-grain texture evolution can be predicted by high-resolution modeling of crystals. Unfortunately, the simulation mesh gets distorted during the deformation because of the heterogeneity of the plastic…
In this project we developed a phase-field model capable of describing multi-component and multi-sublattice ordered phases, by directly incorporating the compound energy CALPHAD formalism based on chemical potentials. We investigated the complex compositional pathway for the formation of the η-phase in Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys during commercial…
The project HyWay aims to promote the design of advanced materials that maintain outstanding mechanical properties while mitigating the impact of hydrogen by developing flexible, efficient tools for multiscale material modelling and characterization. These efficient material assessment suites integrate data-driven approaches, advanced…
The Atom Probe Tomography group in the Microstructure Physics and Alloy Design department is developing integrated protocols for ultra-high vacuum cryogenic specimen transfer between platforms without exposure to atmospheric contamination.
Here, we aim to develop machine-learning enhanced atom probe tomography approaches to reveal chemical short/long-range order (S/LRO) in a series of metallic materials.