Grote, J.-P.; Žeradjanin, A. R.; Cherevko, S.; Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Electrochemical CO2 Reduction: A Combinatorial High-Throughput Approach for Catalytic Activity, Stability and Selectivity Investigations. International Conference on Combinatorial Materials Research, Ghent, Belgium (2015)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Combinatorial screening of catalyst materials for electrochemical CO2 reduction. ACHEMA 2015, Industrial carbon dioxide utilization, Frankfurt, Germany (2015)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Combinatorial study of fundamental electrocatalyst performance - The Scanning Flow Cell coupled to online analytics. 227th annual meeting of the Electrochemical Society, Symposium “State-of-the-Art Tutorial on Diagnostics in Low-Temperature Fuel Cells”, Chicago, Il, USA (2015)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Time and potential resolved dissolution of Pt and Au. Catalysis for solar fuels – Fundamentals and application - Workshop lecture at Technical University Munich, München, Germany (2015)
Hodnik, N.; Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Effect of Composition, Particle Size and Structural Ordering on Stability of PtCu Electrocatalysts for Oxygen Reduction Reaction. ECS Conference on Electrochemical Energy Conversion & Storage with SOFC-XIV, Glasgow, UK (2015)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Combinatorial study of fundamental electrocatalyst performance - The Scanning Flow Cell coupled to online analytics. Heraeus seminar "Electrochemical Surface Science", Bad Honnef, Germany (2015)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Corrosion of electrocatalysts – An essential avenue towards efficient electrochemical energy conversion. Crossroads in electrochemistry - Symposium lecture at Fritz-Haber-Institut der MPG, Berlin, Germany (2015)
Hodnik, N.; Baldizzone, C.; Jeyabharathi, C.; Dehm, G.; Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Bridging the gap between electrochemistry and microscopy: electrochemical IL-TEM and in-situ electrochemical TEM study. 2nd Conference on in In-situ and Correlative Electron Microscopy, Saarbrücken, Germany (2014)
Grote, J.-P.; Žeradjanin, A. R.; Cherevko, S.; Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Electrochemical CO2 reduction: A Combinatorial High-Throughput Approach for Catalytic Activity, Stability, and Selectivity Investigations. Electrochemistry 2014, Mainz, Germany (2014)
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…
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.
Oxidation and corrosion of noble metals is a fundamental problem of crucial importance in the advancement of the long-term renewable energy concept strategy. In our group we use state-of-the-art electrochemical scanning flow cell (SFC) coupled with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) setup to address the problem.
For understanding the underlying hydrogen embrittlement mechanism in transformation-induced plasticity steels, the process of damage evolution in a model austenite/martensite dual-phase microstructure following hydrogenation was investigated through multi-scale electron channelling contrast imaging and in situ optical microscopy.
We will investigate the electrothermomechanical response of individual metallic nanowires as a function of microstructural interfaces from the growth processes. This will be accomplished using in situ SEM 4-point probe-based electrical resistivity measurements and 2-point probe-based impedance measurements, as a function of mechanical strain and…
Hydrogen induced embrittlement of metals is one of the long standing unresolved problems in Materials Science. A hierarchical multiscale approach is used to investigate the underlying atomistic mechanisms.
Hydrogen embrittlement affects high-strength ferrite/martensite dual-phase (DP) steels. The associated micromechanisms which lead to failure have not been fully clarified yet. Here we present a quantitative micromechanical analysis of the microstructural damage phenomena in a model DP steel in the presence of hydrogen.
This project will aim at developing MEMS based nanoforce sensors with capacitive sensing capabilities. The nanoforce sensors will be further incorporated with in situ SEM and TEM small scale testing systems, for allowing simultaneous visualization of the deformation process during mechanical tests
The project aims to study corrosion, a detrimental process with an enormous impact on global economy, by combining denstiy-functional theory calculations with thermodynamic concepts.