Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Stability Investigations of Electrocatalysts for Electrochemical Energy Conversion. Seminar lecture at Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin, Berlin, Germany (2014)
Rossrucker, L.; Schulz, J.; Krebs, S.; Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: A microelectrochemical flow cell coupled to ICP-MS for corrosion investigation of zinc alloys. Gordon Research Seminar on Corrosion – Aqueous, New London, NH, USA (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. 247th ACS National Meeting, Dallas, TX, USA (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy: Reading, Writing, Monitoring of Functional Interfaces. 65th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Symposium, Lausanne, Switzerland (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Basic Science and Key Technologies for Future Applications. Electrochemistry 2014, Johannes Gutentenberg-Universität Mainz, Mainz, Germany (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Combinatorial study of fundamental electrocatalyst performance of materials for oxygen evolution. Heraeus seminar "From Sunlight to Fuels - Novel Materials and Processes for Photovoltaic and (Photo)Catalytic Applications", Bad Honnef, Germany (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Oxygen electrochemistry as a cornerstone for sustainable energy conversion. International Symposium „Recent Achievements and Future Trends in Electrocatalysis“, Erlangen, Germany (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Stability of catalyst materials - the key for the deployment of electrochemical energy conversion. Seminar lecture at Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker, Mülheim/Ruhr, Germany (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Electrochemical Energy Conversion – The key for sustainable utilization of solar energy. Pregl Seminar lecture, National Institute of Chemistry, Ljubljana, Slovenia (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Kombinatorische elektrokatalytische CO2-Reduktion – ECCO2. BMBF Statuskonferenz „Technologien für Nachhaltigkeit und Klimaschutz – Chemische Prozesse und stoffliche Nutzung von CO2“, Königswinter, Germany (2014)
Mayrhofer, K. J. J.: Stability Investigations of Electrocatalysts for Electrochemical Energy Conversion. Annual Symposium of the KNCV Working Group on Electrochemistry, Leiden, The Netherlands (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
Photovoltaic materials have seen rapid development in the past decades, propelling the global transition towards a sustainable and CO2-free economy. Storing the day-time energy for night-time usage has become a major challenge to integrate sizeable solar farms into the electrical grid. Developing technologies to convert solar energy directly into…
It is very challenging to simulate electron-transfer reactions under potential control within high-level electronic structure theory, e. g. to study electrochemical and electrocatalytic reaction mechanisms. We develop a novel method to sample the canonical NVTΦ or NpTΦ ensemble at constant electrode potential in ab initio molecular dynamics…
The field of micromechanics has seen a large progress in the past two decades, enabled by the development of instrumented nanoindentation. Consequently, diverse methodologies have been tested to extract fundamental properties of materials related to their plastic and elastic behaviour and fracture toughness. Established experimental protocols are…
Crystal Plasticity (CP) modeling [1] is a powerful and well established computational materials science tool to investigate mechanical structure–property relations in crystalline materials. It has been successfully applied to study diverse micromechanical phenomena ranging from strain hardening in single crystals to texture evolution in…
Electron microscopes offer unique capabilities to probe materials with extremely high spatial resolution. Recent advancements in in situ platforms and electron detectors have opened novel pathways to explore local properties and the dynamic behaviour of materials.