Knezevic, V.; Sauthoff, G.: Strengthening of Martensitic/Ferritic 12%Cr Model Steels Through Laves Phase Precipitation. Euromat 2003, 8th European Congress on Advanced Materials and Processes, München, Germany (2003)
Risanti, D. D.; Sauthoff, G.: Strengthening of Hot Corrosion-Resistant Fe-Al alloys Through Laves Phase Precipitation. Euromat 2003, 8th European Congress on Advanced Materials and Processes, München, Germany (2003)
Stallybrass, C.; Sauthoff, G.: Ferritic Fe–Al–Ni–Cr alloys for high temperature applications. Thirteenth International Conference on the Strength of Materials (ICSMA XIII), Budapest, Hungary (2003)
Schneider, A.; Falat, L.; Sauthoff, G.; Frommeyer, G.: Microstructures and Mechanical Properties of Fe–Al–C and Fe–Al–M–C (M = Ti, V, Nb, Ta) Alloys. TMS Annual Meeting - Intern. Symp. Intermetallic and Advanced Metallic Materials - A Symposium Dedicated to Dr. C. T. Li on His 65th Birthday, San Diego, CA, USA (2003)
Stein, F.; Palm, M.; Sauthoff, G.: Structures and Stability of Laves Phases. TMS Annual Meeting - Intern. Symp. Intermetallic and Advanced Metallic Materials - A Symposium Dedicated to Dr. C. T. Li on His 65th Birthday, San Diego, CA, USA (2003)
Schneider, A.; Frommeyer, G.; Sauthoff, G.: Intermetallics for High-Temperature Applications - Needs and Prospects. Intern. Symp. Progress of Metal Science, Tokyo (2002)
Stein, F.; Sauthoff, G.; Palm, M.: Intermetallic Phases and Phase Equilibria in the Fe–Zr and Fe–Zr–Al Systems. Discussion Meeting on Thermodynamics of Alloys (TOFA 2002), Rome, Italy (2002)
Palm, M.; Sauthoff, G.: Characterization and Processing of an Advanced Intermetallic NiAl-Base Intermetallic Alloy for High-Temperature Applications. Structural Intermetallics 2001 (ISSI-3), Jackson Hole, Wyoming (2002)
Stein, F.; Zhang, L.; Palm, M.; Sauthoff, G.: Al-Ti Alloys with Al-Rich Titanium Aluminides: Phase Equilibria, Evolution of Phases and Strength of Lamellar TiAl+r-Al2Ti Alloys. Structural Intermetallics 2001 (ISSI-3), Jackson Hole, Wyoming, USA (2002)
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials have developed a carbon-free, energy-saving method to extract nickel for batteries, magnets and stainless steel.
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.