Zhu, L.-F.; Körmann, F.; Chen, Q.; Selleby, M.; Neugebauer, J.; Grabowski, B.: Accelerating ab initio melting property calculations with machine learning: application to the high entropy alloy TaVCrW. npj Computational Materials 10 (1), 274 (2024)
Zhu, L.-F.; Körmann, F.; Ruban, A. V.; Neugebauer, J.; Grabowski, B.: Performance of the standard exchange-correlation functionals in predicting melting properties fully from first principles: Application to Al and magnetic Ni. Physical Review B 101 (14), 144108 (2020)
Zhu, L.-F.; Grabowski, B.; Neugebauer, J.: Efficient approach to compute melting properties fully from ab initio with application to Cu. Physical Review B 96 (22), 224202 (2017)
Sandlöbes, S.; Friák, M.; Dick, A.; Zaefferer, S.; Yi, S.; Letzig, D.; Pei, Z.; Zhu, L.-F.; Neugebauer, J.; Raabe, D.: Complementary TEM and ab ignition study on the ductilizing effect of Y in solid solution Mg–Y alloys. In: Proceedings of the 9th Intern. Conference on Magnesium alloys and their applications, pp. 467 - 472. 9th Intern. Conference on Magnesium alloys and their applications, Vancouver, Canada, July 08, 2012 - July 12, 2012. (2012)
Zhu, L.-F.: Towards high throughput melting property calculations with ab initio accuracy aided by machine learning potential. The third generation (3G) Calphad at KTH, Stockholm, Sweden (2023)
Zhu, L.-F.; Neugebauer, J.; Grabowski, B.: Towards high throughput melting property calculations with ab initio accuracy aided by machine learning potential. CALPHAD L Conference, Cambridge, MA, USA (2023)
Zhu, L.-F.: Melting properties from ab initio using efficient TOR-TILD approach: Applications to refractory metals V, W and V–W alloy. CALPHAD XLVIII Conference, Stockholm, Sweden (2023)
Zhu, L.-F.: Towards high throughput melting property calculations with ab initio accuracy aided by machine learning potential and pyiron workflow. CM retreat, Ebernburg, Germany (2022)
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.
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…