Po, G.; Admal, N. C.; Svendsen, B.: Non-local Thermoelasticity Based on Equilibrium Statistical Thermodynamics. Journal of Elasticity 139, pp. 37 - 59 (2020)
Kochmann, J.; Wulfinghoff, S.; Ehle, L.; Mayer, J.; Svendsen, B.: Efficient and accurate two-scale FE-FFT-based prediction of the effective material behavior of elasto-viscoplastic polycrystals. Computational Mechanics 61, pp. 751 - 764 (2018)
Alipour, A.; Wulfinghoff, S.; Bayat, H. R.; Reese, S.; Svendsen, B.: The concept of control points in hybrid discontinuous Galerkin methods—Application to geometrically nonlinear crystal plasticity. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 114 (5), pp. 557 - 579 (2018)
Svendsen, B.; Shanthraj, P.; Raabe, D.: Finite-deformation phase-field chemomechanics for multiphase, multicomponent solids. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 112, pp. 619 - 636 (2018)
Dusthakar, D. K.; Menzel, A.; Svendsen, B.: Laminate-based modelling of single and polycrystalline ferroelectric materials – application to tetragonal barium titanate. Mechanics of Materials 117, pp. 235 - 254 (2018)
Hütter, M.; Svendsen, B.: Formulation of strongly non-local, non-isothermal dynamics for heterogeneous solids based on the GENERIC with application to phase-field modeling. Materials Theory (1), 4, pp. 1 - 20 (2017)
Mianroodi, J. R.; Hunter, A. G. M.; Beyerlein, I. J.; Svendsen, B.: Theoretical and computational comparison of models for dislocation dissociation and stacking fault/core formation in fcc crystals. Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 95, pp. 719 - 741 (2016)
Kochmann, J.; Wulfinghoff, S.; Reese, S.; Mianroodi, J. R.; Svendsen, B.: Two-scale FE–FFT- and phase-field-based computational modeling of bulk microstructural evolution and macroscopic material behavior. Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering 305, pp. 89 - 110 (2016)
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…
Smaller is stronger” is well known in micromechanics, but the properties far from the quasi-static regime and the nominal temperatures remain unexplored. This research will bridge this gap on how materials behave under the extreme conditions of strain rate and temperature, to enhance fundamental understanding of their deformation mechanisms. The…
“Smaller is stronger” is well known in micromechanics, but the properties far from the quasi-static regime and the nominal temperatures remain unexplored. This research will bridge this gap on how materials behave under the extreme conditions of strain rate and temperature, to enhance fundamental understanding of their deformation mechanisms. The…
Hydrogen embrittlement (HE) of steel is a great challenge in engineering applications. However, the HE mechanisms are not fully understood. Conventional studies of HE are mostly based on post mortem observations of the microstructure evolution and those results can be misleading due to intermediate H diffusion. Therefore, experiments with a…
We plan to investigate the rate-dependent tensile properties of 2D materials such as metal thin films and PbMoO4 (PMO) films by using a combination of a novel plan-view FIB based sample lift out method and a MEMS based in situ tensile testing platform inside a TEM.
Biological materials in nature have a lot to teach us when in comes to creating tough bio-inspired designs. This project aims to explore the unknown impact mitigation mechanisms of the muskox head (ovibus moschatus) at several length scales and use this gained knowledge to develop a novel mesoscale (10 µm to 1000 µm) metamaterial that can mimic the…
Microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) of iron by marine sulfate reducing bacteria (SRB) is studied electrochemically and surfaces of corroded samples have been investigated in a long-term project.
In this project we investigate the hydrogen distribution and desorption behavior in an electrochemically hydrogen-charged binary Ni-Nb model alloy. The aim is to study the role of the delta phase in hydrogen embrittlement of the Ni-base alloy 718.