Dehm, G.: Resolving the interplay of nanostructure and mechanical properties in advanced materials. Karlsruher Werkstoffkolloquium im Wintersemester 2016/2017, Karlsruhe, Germany (2017)
Dehm, G.: Towards thermally stable nanocrystalline alloys with exceptional strength: Cu–Cr as a case study. 16th International Conference on Rapidly Quenched and Metastable Materials (RQ16), Leoben, Austria (2017)
Dehm, G.; Harzer, T. P.; Liebscher, C.; Raghavan, R.: High Temperature Plasticity of Cu–Cr Nanolayered and Chemically Nanostructured Cu–Cr Films. 2017 TMS Annual Meeting & Exhibition, San Diego, CA, USA (2017)
Dehm, G.; Malyar, N.; Kirchlechner, C.: Towards probing the barrier strength of grain boundaries for dislocation transmission. Electronic Materials and Applications 2017, Orlando, FL, USA (2017)
Dehm, G.; Malyar, N.; Kirchlechner, C.: Do we understand dislocation transmission through grain boundaries? PICS meeting, Luminy, Marseille, France (2017)
Jaya, B. N.; Kirchlechner, C.; Dehm, G.: Fracture Behavior of Nanostructured Heavily Cold Drawn Pearlite: Influence of the Interface. TMS 2017, San Diego, CA, USA (2017)
Dehm, G.: Fracture testing of thin films: insights from synchrotron XRD and micro-cantilever experiments. 2016 MRS Fall Meeting, Boston, MA, USA (2016)
Dehm, G.; Harzer, T. P.; Dennenwaldt, T.; Freysoldt, C.; Liebscher, C.: Chemical demixing and thermal stability of supersaturated nanocrystalline CuCr alloys: Insights from advanced TEM. MS&T '16, Materials Science & Technology 2016 Conference & Exhibition, Salt Lake City, UT, USA (2016)
Dehm, G.: Resolving the interplay of nanostructure and mechanical properties by advanced electron microscopy. MSE Conference, Materials Science and Engineering, Darmstadt, Germany (2016)
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
Atom probe tomography (APT) is one of the MPIE’s key experiments for understanding the interplay of chemical composition in very complex microstructures down to the level of individual atoms. In APT, a needle-shaped specimen (tip diameter ≈100nm) is prepared from the material of interest and subjected to a high voltage. Additional voltage or laser…
Ever since the discovery of electricity, chemical reactions occurring at the interface between a solid electrode and an aqueous solution have aroused great scientific interest, not least by the opportunity to influence and control the reactions by applying a voltage across the interface. Our current textbook knowledge is mostly based on mesoscopic…
Recent developments in experimental techniques and computer simulations provided the basis to achieve many of the breakthroughs in understanding materials down to the atomic scale. While extremely powerful, these techniques produce more and more complex data, forcing all departments to develop advanced data management and analysis tools as well as…
Integrated Computational Materials Engineering (ICME) is one of the emerging hot topics in Computational Materials Simulation during the last years. It aims at the integration of simulation tools at different length scales and along the processing chain to predict and optimize final component properties.
Data-rich experiments such as scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) provide large amounts of multi-dimensional raw data that encodes, via correlations or hierarchical patterns, much of the underlying materials physics. With modern instrumentation, data generation tends to be faster than human analysis, and the full information content is…