Hassel, A. W.; Seo, M.: Localised Photoelectrochemical Measurement with the Scanning Droplet Cell. Passivity and Localized Corrosion: International Symposium in Honor of Professor Norio Sato. Electrochem. Soc. Proc. PV 99-27, pp. 337 - 342 (1999)
Hassel, A. W.; Seo, M.: The Scanning Droplet Cell: Experimental Results and Determination of the Potential Distribution. Proceed. Japan Soc. Corr. Engineer. Mater. Environments 1998, pp. 293 - 296 (1998)
Hassel, A. W.: Elektronische und ionische Transportprozesse in ultradünnen Aluminiumoxidschichten. Oberflächentechnik '95, DGO Jahrestagung 33, pp. 31 - 34 (1995)
Venzlaff, H.; Enning, D.; Widdel, F.; Stratmann, M.; Hassel, A. W.: A new model for microbiologically influenced corrosion. The European Corrosion Congress Eurocorr 2010, Moscow, Russia (2010)
Mardare, A. I.; Ludwig, A.; Savan, A.; Wieck, A. D.; Hassel, A. W.: High throughput growth and in situ characterization of anodic oxides on Ti, Ta and Hf combinatorial alloys. “Electrochemistry: Crossing Boundaries”, GDCh, Gießen, Germany (2008)
Fenster, J. C.; Rohwerder, M.; Hassel, A. W.: Impedance-Titration: A Novel Method for Understanding the Kinetics of Corrosion in Aqueous Solutions. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spanien (2008)
Hassel, A. W.: Progress in the Electrochemical Processing of Directionally Solidified Eutectics. 7th International Symposium on Electrochemical Micro- and Nanosystems, Ein-Gedi, Israel (2008)
Hassel, A. W.; Milenkovic, S.; Smith, A. J.: Nanowires and Nanowire Arrays by an Electrochemical Structuring of Directionally Solidified Eutectics. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spain (2008)
Mardare, A. I.; Wieck, A. D.; Hassel, A. W.: Combinatorial microelectrochemistry using an automated scanning droplet cell. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spanien (2008)
Stratmann, M.; Hassel, A. W.; Rohwerder, M.: Microelectrochemical Investigations of Interfaces and Surfaces of Advanced Materialks. 7th International Symposium on Electrochemical Micro- and Nanosystems, Ein-Gedi, Israel (2008)
Venzlaff, H.; Widdel, F.; Stratmann, M.; Hassel, A. W.: Microbial corrosion induced by a new highly aggressive SRB strain. 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Sevilla, Spain (2008)
Hassel, A. W.: Tailoring of Nanostructured Alloys by Anodisation. International Smposium on Anodizing Science and Technology 2008, Rusutsu, Japan (2008)
Mardare, A. I.; Wieck, A. D.; Hassel, A. W.: High throughput synthesis and characterization of anodic oxides on valve metal combinatorial libraries. 2nd International IMPRS-SurMat Workshop on Surface and Interface Engineering in Advanced Materials, Bochum, Germany (2008)
Chen, Y.; Milenkovic, S.; Hassel, A. W.: Fabrication of Iso-oriented Gold Nanobelt Arrays from an Fe–Au Eutectoid. 9th International Conference on Nanostructured Materials, Rio de Janerio, Brazil (2008)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
This project is part of Correlative atomic structural and compositional investigations on Co and CoNi-based superalloys as a part of SFB/Transregio 103 project “Superalloy Single Crystals”. This project deals with the identifying the local atomic diffusional mechanisms occurring during creep of new Co and Co/Ni based superalloys by correlative…
This project aims to investigate the dynamic hardness of B2-iron aluminides at high strain rates using an in situ nanomechanical tester capable of indentation up to constant strain rates of up to 100000 s−1 and study the microstructure evolution across strain rate range.
In this project, we investigate a high angle grain boundary in elemental copper on the atomic scale which shows an alternating pattern of two different grain boundary phases. This work provides unprecedented views into the intrinsic mechanisms of GB phase transitions in simple elemental metals and opens entirely novel possibilities to kinetically engineer interfacial properties.