Frenznick, S.; Stratmann, M.; Rohwerder, M.: A new advanced experimental setup for in-depth study of the interfacial reaction during reactive wetting. Review of Scientific Instruments 79 (4), 043901 (2008)
de la Fuente, D.; Rohwerder, M.: Fundamental investigation on the stability of the steel/coating interfaces contaminated by submicroscopic salt particles. Progress in Organic Coatings 61 (2-4), pp. 233 - 239 (2008)
Hausbrand, R.; Stratmann, M.; Rohwerder, M.: The physical meaning of electrode potentials at metal surfaces and polymer/metal interfaces: Consequences for delamination. Journal of the Electrochemical Society 155 (7), pp. C369 - C379 (2008)
Rohwerder, M.; Michalik, A.: Conducting polymers for corrosion protection: What makes the difference between failure and success? Electrochimica Acta 53 (3 SPEC. ISS.), pp. 1301 - 1314 (2007)
Zhong, Q.; Rohwerder, M.; Shi, L.: The effect of ionic penetration on semiconducting behaviour of temporarily protective oil coating on the surface of AISI stainless steel. Materials and Corrosion-Werkstoffe und Korrosion 56 (9), pp. 597 - 605 (2005)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
Project A02 of the SFB1394 studies dislocations in crystallographic complex phases and investigates the effect of segregation on the structure and properties of defects in the Mg-Al-Ca System.
The aim of this project is to develop novel nanostructured Fe-Co-Ti-X (X = Si, Ge, Sn) compositionally complex alloys (CCAs) with adjustable magnetic properties by tailoring microstructure and phase constituents through compositional and process tuning. The key aspect of this work is to build a fundamental understanding of the correlation between…
In this project, we aim to enhance the mechanical properties of an equiatomic CoCrNi medium-entropy alloy (MEA) by interstitial alloying. Carbon and nitrogen with varying contents have been added into the face-centred cubic structured CoCrNi MEA.
Hydrogen is a clean energy source as its combustion yields only water and heat. However, as hydrogen prefers to accumulate in the concentrated stress region of metallic materials, a few ppm Hydrogen can already cause the unexpected sudden brittle failure, the so-called “hydrogen embrittlement”. The difficulties in directly tracking hydrogen limits…