Ramachandramoorthy, R.: High strain rate testing of copper based micropillars and microlattices. 206 Departmental Seminar Series, Empa, Thun, Switzerland (2021)
Ramachandramoorthy, R.: Pushing the limits of microscale manufacturing and mechanical testing. Department of Material Science and Engineering Seminar Series, Tel-Aviv University, online, Tel-Aviv, Israel (2021)
Ramachandramoorthy, R.: High strain rate testing from micro-to-meso scale. MRS Spring 2021 Conference - In Situ Mechanical Testing of Materials at Small Length Scales, Modeling and Data Analysis Symposium, online (2021)
Ramachandramoorthy, R.: High strain rate micromechanics: Instrumentation and implementation. DGM - Arbeitskreis Rasterkraftmikroskopie und nanomechanische Methoden, online (2020)
Bellón Lara, B.; Lu, W.; Fang, X.; Dehm, G.; Ramachandramoorthy, R.: Effect of Defects on the Dynamic Compression of Strontium Titanate Micropillars. ECI Nanomechanical Testing in Materials Research and Development IX, Sicily, Italy (2024)
Ding, K.; Kalácska, S.; Sharma, A.; Jain, M.; Koelmans, W.; Schürch, P.; Dehm, G.; Michler, J. K.; Ramachandramoorthy, R.: Copper micro-honeycomb architectures: fabrication, characterization and high strain rate testing. ECI Nanomechanical Testing in Materials Research and Development IX, Giardini Naxos, Messina (Sicily), Italy (2024)
Kang, S. G.; Gainov, R. R.; Heussen, D.; Bieler, S.; Sun, Z.; Weinberg, K.; Dehm, G.; Ramachandramoorthy, R.: Green laser powder bed fusion based fabrication and rate-dependent mechanical properties of copper lattices. arXiv (2022)
Water electrolysis has the potential to become the major technology for the production of the high amount of green hydrogen that is necessary for its widespread application in a decarbonized economy. The bottleneck of this electrochemical reaction is the anodic partial reaction, the oxygen evolution reaction (OER), which is sluggish and hence…
We have studied a nanocrystalline AlCrCuFeNiZn high-entropy alloy synthesized by ball milling followed by hot compaction at 600°C for 15 min at 650 MPa. X-ray diffraction reveals that the mechanically alloyed powder consists of a solid-solution body-centered cubic (bcc) matrix containing 12 vol.% face-centered cubic (fcc) phase. After hot compaction, it consists of 60 vol.% bcc and 40 vol.% fcc. Composition analysis by atom probe tomography shows that the material is not a homogeneous fcc–bcc solid solution
Magnetic properties of magnetocaloric materials is of utmost importance for their functional applications. In this project, we study the magnetic properties of different materials with the final goal to discover new magnetocaloric materials more suited for practical applications.