Isotta, E.: Investigating microstructure via thermal conductivity imaging: from grain boundaries, to phase segregations and material anisotropy. 50th International Conference and Expo on Advanced Ceramics and Composites (ICACC 2026), Daytona Beach, FL, USA (2026)
Isotta, E.: Investigating microstructure via thermal conductivity imaging: from grain boundaries, to material anisotropy, and phase segregations. Invited Seminar at RWTH Aachen, Physics Department, Aachen, Germany (2025)
Isotta, E.: Thermal conductivity imaging to advance microstructure engineering in thermoelectric and energy materials. Materials Science and Technology Meeting (MSandT) 2025, Columbus, OH, USA (2025)
Isotta, E.; Zhang, S.; Ghosh, S.; de Boor, J.; Balogun, O.; Snyder, G. J.; Scheu, C.: Thermal conductivity imaging to advance microstructure engineering in thermoelectrics. European Conference on Thermoelectrics 2025, Nancy, France (2025)
Isotta, E.: Thermal conductivity imaging to guide microstructure engineering in energy materials. Invited Seminar at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, Germany (2025)
Isotta, E.: Thermal conductivity imaging to guide microstructure engineering in energy materials. Invited Seminar at the German Aerospace Center in Cologne, Köln, Germany (2025)
Isotta, E.: Thermal conductivity imaging to guide microstructure engineering in energy materials. Iberian Workshop on Thermoelectrics 2025, Castello de la Plana, Spain (2025)
Isotta, E.: Local thermal conductivity imaging and modelling to guide microstructure engineering in energy materials. TMS 2025 Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, NV, USA (2025)
Isotta, E.: Thermal conductivity imaging to guide microstructure engineering in energy materials. Invited Seminar at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Klosterneuburg, Austria (2024)
Busch, F.; Balogun, O.; Snyder, G. J.; Scheu, C.; Isotta, E.: Unravelling grain boundary influences on electronic and lattice thermal conductivity in Mn-doped SnTe thermoelectrics. 21st European Conference on Thermoelectrics (ECT) 2025, Nancy, Frankreich (2025)
Wissenschaftler am Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien haben ein CO2-freies und energiesparendes Verfahren entwickelt, um Nickel für Batterien, Magnete und Edelstahl zu gewinnen.
Max-Planck-Wissenschaftler kombinieren die Gewinnung, Herstellung, Mischung und Verarbeitung von Metallen und Legierungen in einem einzigen, umweltfreundlichen Schritt. Ihre Ergebnisse sind jetzt in der Zeitschrift Nature veröffentlicht.
Neues Video erklärt wie Ammoniak die Speicherung und den Transport von Wasserstoff erleichtert und zur Produktion von grünem Stahl verwendet werden kann