Kürnsteiner, P.; Wilms, M. B.; Weisheit, A.; Jägle, E. A.; Raabe, D.: Precipitation Reaction in a Maraging Steel during Laser Additive Manufacturing triggered by Intrinsic Heat Treatment. Materials Science and Engineering Congress, Darmstadt, Germany (2016)
Jägle, E. A.: Small variations in powder composition lead to strong differences in part properties. Alloys for Additive Manufacturing Workshop 2016, Düsseldorf, Germany (2016)
Jägle, E. A.: Alloys for Laser Additive Manufacturing: general considerations and precipitation reactions. Seminar at Institut für Werkstoff-Forschung, DLR Köln 2016, Köln, Germany (2016)
Jägle, E. A.: Precipitation Reactions in Age-Hardenable Alloys During Laser Additive Manufacturing. Seminar at EMPA (Eidgenössische Materialprüfungs- und Forschungsanstalt), Dübendorf, Switzerland (2016)
Jägle, E. A.: Alloys for and by Laser Additive Manufacturing – the basic research perspective. 2nd European Scientific Steel Panel – Metal Additive Manufacturing, Steel Institute VdEH, Düsseldorf, Germany (2015)
Jägle, E. A.: Maraging steel produced by LAM: Influence of processing on precipitation and austenite reversion. Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials (PTM), Whistler, BC, Canada (2015)
Jägle, E. A.; Tytko, D.; Choi, P.-P.; Raabe, D.: Deformation-induced intermixing in a model multilayer system. Atom Probe Tomography & Microscopy 2014, Stuttgart, Germany (2014)
Jägle, E. A.: Atom Probe Tomography: Basics, data analysis and application to the analysis of phase transformations. Department of Materials Engineering house seminar, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium (2014)
Jägle, E.: Parameter finding for and accuracy of the Maximum Separation algorithm assessed by Atom Probe simulations. 2nd European APT Workshop at ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland (2013)
Jägle, E.: Atom Probe Tomography: Basics, data analysis and application to the analysis of advanced steels. Symposium "Frontiers in Steelmaking and Steel Design", INM, Saarbrücken, Germany (2013)
Jägle, E.: Atom Probe Tomography: Basics, data analysis and application to the analysis of phase transformations. Kolloquium at Max-Planck-Institute for Intelligent Systems, Stuttgart, Germany (2013)
Hariharan, A.; Lu, L.; Risse, J.; Jägle, E. A.; Raabe, D.: Mechanisms Contributing to Solidification Cracking during laser powder bed fusion of Inconel-738LC. Alloys for Additive Manufacturing Symposium 2019 (AAMS2019), Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden (2019)
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
Crystal plasticity modelling has gained considerable momentum in the past 20 years [1]. Developing this field from its original mean-field homogenization approach using viscoplastic constitutive hardening rules into an advanced multi-physics continuum field solution strategy requires a long-term initiative. The group “Theory and Simulation” of…
The structure of grain boundaries (GBs) is dependent on the crystallographic structure of the material, orientation of the neighbouring grains, composition of material and temperature. The abovementioned conditions set a specific structure of the GB which dictates several properties of the materials, e.g. mechanical behaviour, diffusion, and…
The goal of this project is to develop an environmental chamber for mechanical testing setups, which will enable mechanical metrology of different microarchitectures such as micropillars and microlattices, as a function of temperature, humidity and gaseous environment.
The development of pyiron started in 2011 in the CM department to foster the implementation, rapid prototyping and application of the highly advanced fully ab initio simulation techniques developed by the department. The pyiron platform bundles the different steps occurring in a typical simulation life cycle in a single software platform and…
The project focuses on development and design of workflows, which enable advanced processing and analyses of various data obtained from different field ion emission microscope techniques such as field ion microscope (FIM), atom probe tomography (APT), electronic FIM (e-FIM) and time of flight enabled FIM (tof-FIM).
This project will aim at addressing the specific knowledge gap of experimental data on the mechanical behavior of microscale samples at ultra-short-time scales by the development of testing platforms capable of conducting quantitative micromechanical testing under extreme strain rates upto 10000/s and beyond.
The prediction of materials properties with ab initio based methods is a highly successful strategy in materials science. While the working horse density functional theory (DFT) was originally designed to describe the performance of materials in the ground state, the extension of these methods to finite temperatures has seen remarkable…
This work led so far to several high impact publications: for the first time nanobeam diffraction (NBD) orientation mapping was used on atom probe tips, thereby enabling the high throughput characterization of grain boundary segregation as well as the crystallographic identification of phases.