Sobota, L.; Bondue, C. J.; Hosseini, P.; Kaiser, C.; Spallek, M.; Tschulik, K.: Impact of the Electrochemically Inert Furan Ring on the Oxidation of the Alcohol and Aldehyde Functional Group of 5-Hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF). ChemElectroChem 11 (1), e202300151 (2024)
Luan, C.; Corva, M.; Hagemann, U.; Wang, H.; Heidelmann, M.; Tschulik, K.; Li, T.: Atomic-Scale Insights into Morphological, Structural, and Compositional Evolution of CoOOH during Oxygen Evolution Reaction. ACS Catalysis 13 (2), pp. 1400 - 1411 (2023)
Piontek, S. M.; Naujoks, D.; Tabassum, T.; DelloStritto, M. J.; Jaugstetter, M.; Hosseini, P.; Corva, M.; Ludwig, Alfred, A.; Tschulik, K.; Klein, M. L.et al.; Petersen, P. B.: Probing the Gold/Water Interface with Surface-Specific Spectroscopy. ACS Physical Chemistry Au 3 (1), pp. 119 - 129 (2023)
Kanokkanchana, K.; Tschulik, K.: Electronic Circuit Simulations as a Tool to Understand Distorted Signals in Single-Entity Electrochemistry. The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 13 (43), pp. 10120 - 10125 (2022)
Corva, M.; Blanc, N.; Bondue, C. J.; Tschulik, K.: Differential Tafel Analysis: A Quick and Robust Tool to Inspect and Benchmark Charge Transfer in Electrocatalysis. ACS Catalysis 12, pp. 13805 - 13812 (2022)
Rurainsky, C.; Nettler, D. -.; Pahl, T.; Just, A.; Cignoni, P.; Kanokkanchana, K.; Tschulik, K.: Electrochemical dealloying in a magnetic field-Tapping the potential for catalyst and material design. Electrochimica Acta 426, 140807 (2022)
Aymerich Armengol, R.; Cignoni, P.; Ebbinghaus, P.; Linnemann, J.; Rabe, M.; Tschulik, K.; Scheu, C.; Lim, J.: Electron microscopy insights on the mechanism of morphology/phase transformations in manganese oxides. Institut de Nanociència i Nanotecnologia (ICN2), Bellaterra, Spain (2022)
Aymerich Armengol, R.; Cignoni, P.; Ebbinghaus, P.; Rabe, M.; Tschulik, K.; Scheu, C.; Lim, J.: Mechanism of coupled phase/morphology transformation of 2D manganese oxides through Fe galvanic exchange reaction. Chemistry Department Seminar, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon, South Korea (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.
The aim of the work is to develop instrumentation, methodology and protocols to extract the dynamic strength and hardness of micro-/nano- scale materials at high strain rates using an in situ nanomechanical tester capable of indentation up to constant strain rates of up to 100000 s−1.