El-Zoka, A.; Kim, S.-H.; Khanchandani, H.; Stephenson, L.; Gault, B.: Advances in Cryo-Atom Probe Tomography Studies on Formation of Nanoporous Metals by Dealloying (Digital Presentation). In ECS Meeting Abstracts, MA2022-01 (47), p. 1983. The Electrochemical Society (2022)
Schwarz, T.; Wieland, F.; Zeller-Plumhoff, B.; Gault, B.: On the trail of Mg - Incorporation and diffusion of Mg into the bone structure during the biodegradation of a MgGd screw. 17th Biometal 2025 Symposium, Cetraro, Italy (2025)
Schwarz, T.; Hsu, Y.-L.; Dumont, M.; Garcia-Giner, V.; Jung, C.; Porter, A.; Gault, B.: Atom Probe Tomography - a new approach to provide new insights into the interfacial reaction at the liquid-solid interface on the atomic scale. Institute Seminar FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg, Department of Materials Science, Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany (2025)
Schwarz, T.; Hsu, Y.-L.; Dumont, M.; Garcia-Giner, V.; Jung, C.; Porter, A.; Gault, B.: Atom probe tomography – a new technique to understand biominerals/materials on the atomic scale. 8th BioMAT 2025 - Symposium on Biomaterials and Related Areas, Weimar, Germany (2025)
Zhou, X.; Hickel, T.; Gault, B.; Ophus, C.; Liebscher, C.; Dehm, G.; Raabe, D.: Exploring the Relationship Between Grain Boundary Structure and Chemical Composition at the Atomic Level. International Conference on Intergranular and Interphase Boundaries in Materials (IIB 2024), Beijing, China (2024)
Krämer, M.; Favelukis, B.; El-Zoka, A.; Sokol, M.; A. Rosen, B.; Eliaz, N.; Kim, S.-H.; Gault, B.: Compositional mapping of 2D MXenes at the near-atomic-scale by atom probe tomography. EUROMXENE Congress 2024, Valencia, Spain (2024)
Li, Y.; Gault, B.: Machine Learning-enabled Tomographic Imaging of Chemical Short-range Order in Fe-based Solid-solutions. DPG 2024, Berlin, Germany (2024)
Li, Y.; Gault, B.: Machine Learning-enabled Tomographic Imaging of Chemical Short-range Order in Fe-based Solid-solutions. TMS 2024, Orlando, FL, USA (2024)
If manganese nodules can be mined in an environmentally friendly way, the critical metals needed for the energy transition could be produced with low CO2 emissions
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials have developed a carbon-free, energy-saving method to extract nickel for batteries, magnets and stainless steel.
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.