Tan, A. M. Z.; Freysoldt, C.; Hennig, R. G.: First-principles investigation of charged dopants and dopant-vacancy defect complexes in monolayer MoS2. Physical Review Materials 4 (11), 114002 (2020)
Tan, A. M. Z.; Freysoldt, C.; Hennig, R. G.: Stability of charged sulfur vacancies in 2D and bulk MoS2 from plane-wave density functional theory with electrostatic corrections. Physical Review Materials 4 (6), 064004 (2020)
Freysoldt, C.; Neugebauer, J.: First-principles calculations for charged defects at surfaces, interfaces, and two-dimensional materials in the presence of electric fields. Physical Review B 97 (20), 205425 (2018)
Wang, J.; Freysoldt, C.; Du, Y.; Sun, L.: First-Principles study of intrinsic defects in ammonia borane. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 121 (41), pp. 22680 - 22689 (2017)
Freysoldt, C.: On-the-fly parameterization of internal coordinate force constants for quasi-Newton geometry optimization in atomistic calculations. Computational Materials Science 133, pp. 71 - 81 (2017)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
In this ongoing project, we investigate spinodal fluctuations at crystal defects such as grain boundaries and dislocations in Fe-Mn alloys using atom probe tomography, electron microscopy and thermodynamic modeling [1,2].
The aim of the Additive micromanufacturing (AMMicro) project is to fabricate advanced multimaterial/multiphase MEMS devices with superior impact-resistance and self-damage sensing mechanisms.
The Ni- and Co-based γ/γ’ superalloys are famous for their excellent high-temperature mechanical properties that result from their fine-scaled coherent microstructure of L12-ordered precipitates (γ’ phase) in an fcc solid solution matrix (γ phase). The only binary Co-based system showing this special type of microstructure is the Co-Ti system…
In this project, we employ atomistic computer simulations to study grain boundaries. Primarily, molecular dynamics simulations are used to explore their energetics and mobility in Cu- and Al-based systems in close collaboration with experimental works in the GB-CORRELATE project.