Wang, D.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: On the role of the collinear dislocation interaction in deformation patterning and laminate formation in single crystal plasticity. Mechanics of Materials 125, pp. 70 - 79 (2018)
Diehl, M.: Review and outlook: mechanical, thermodynamic, and kinetic continuum modeling of metallic materials at the grain scale. MRS Communications 7 (4), pp. 735 - 746 (2017)
Diehl, M.; Groeber, M.; Haase, C.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.: Identifying Structure–Property Relationships Through DREAM.3D Representative Volume Elements and DAMASK Crystal Plasticity Simulations: An Integrated Computational Materials Engineering Approach. JOM-Journal of the Minerals Metals & Materials Society 69 (5), pp. 848 - 855 (2017)
Diehl, M.; Wicke, M.; Shanthraj, P.; Roters, F.; Brueckner-Foit, A.; Raabe, D.: Coupled Crystal Plasticity–Phase Field Fracture Simulation Study on Damage Evolution Around a Void: Pore Shape Versus Crystallographic Orientation. JOM-Journal of the Minerals Metals & Materials Society 69 (5), pp. 872 - 878 (2017)
Zhang, H.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.: A virtual laboratory using high resolution crystal plasticity simulations to determine the initial yield surface for sheet metal forming operations. International Journal of Plasticity 80, pp. 111 - 138 (2016)
Cereceda, D.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.; Raabe, D.; Perlado, J. M.; Marian, J.: Unraveling the temperature dependence of the yield strength in single-crystal tungsten using atomistically-informed crystal plasticity calcula- tions. International Journal of Plasticity 78, pp. 242 - 265 (2016)
Diehl, M.; Shanthraj, P.; Eisenlohr, P.; Roters, F.: Neighborhood influences on stress and strain partitioning in dual-phase microstructures. An investigation on synthetic polycrystals with a robust spectral-based numerical method. Meccanica 51 (2), pp. 429 - 441 (2016)
Shanthraj, P.; Eisenlohr, P.; Diehl, M.; Roters, F.: Numerically robust spectral methods for crystal plasticity simulations of heterogeneous materials. International Journal of Plasticity 66, pp. 31 - 45 (2015)
Start of a collaborative research project on the sustainable production of manganese and its alloys being funded by European Union with 7 million euros
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…