Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: High Temperature Corrosion: Corrosion process of stainless steels and nickel base alloys under BtE and WtE conditions. International Conference on Waste and Biomass Combustion, Michelangelo Hotel Milano, Italy (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Interim report on corrosion data: Dependence on variation of chemical environment. NextGenBioWaste, 2nd Progress Meeting 2008, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Contribution to the analysis of the corrosion process of metallic materials in incineration plants. EUROCORR 2008, EICC Edinburgh, UK (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: High Temperature Corrosion: Corrosion mechanism of candidate materials in lab-scale incineration environments. General Assembly NextGenBioWaste 2008, De Zwijger Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Corrosion and fouling data of candidate materials for WtE components: Part II. NextGenBioWaste, 1st Progress Meeting 2008, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2008)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Corrosion and fouling data of candidate materials for WtE components: Part I. NextGenBioWaste, 2nd Progress Meeting 2007, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2007)
Schmitt, M.; Spiegel, M.: Introduction to the Working Group NGBW. NextGenBioWaste, 1st Progress Meeting 2007, Schiphol Airport Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2007)
International researcher team presents a novel microstructure design strategy for lean medium-manganese steels with optimized properties in the journal Science
This project aims to investigate the influence of grain boundaries on mechanical behavior at ultra-high strain rates and low temperatures. For this micropillar compressions on copper bi-crystals containing different grain boundaries will be performed.
Within this project we investigate chemical fluctuations at the nanometre scale in polycrystalline Cu(In,Ga)Se2 and CuInS2 thin-flims used as absorber material in solar cells.
This project aims to investigate the dynamic hardness of B2-iron aluminides at high strain rates using an in situ nanomechanical tester capable of indentation up to constant strain rates of up to 100000 s−1 and study the microstructure evolution across strain rate range.
The thorough, mechanism-based, quantitative understanding of dislocation-grain boundary interactions is a central aim of the Nano- and Micromechanics group of the MPIE [1-8]. For this purpose, we isolate a single defined grain boundary in micron-sized sample. Subsequently, we measure and compare the uniaxial compression properties with respect to…