Voß, S.; Stein, F.; Palm, M.; Raabe, D.: Mechanical Properties of Laves Phases in the Systems Fe–Nb(–Al) and Co–Nb(–Al) using Polycrystalline, Single-Phase Material. Materiels Science and Engineering 2010 (MSE), Darmstadt, Germany (2010)
Stein, F.; Lazace, J.: Kinetics of the Peritectoid Decomposition of the Intermetallic Phase Nb2Co7. PTM 2010, Solid-Solid Phase Transformations in Inorganic Materials, Avignon, France (2010)
Friák, M.; Deges, J.; Krein, R.; Stein, F.; Palm, M.; Frommeyer, G.; Neugebauer, J.: Combining Experimental and Computational Methods in the Development of Fe3Al-based Materials. 5th Discussion Meeting on the Development of Innovative Iron Aluminium Alloys (FEAL 2009), Prague, Czech Republic (2009)
Stein, F.; Prymak, O.: Experimental Investigation of Phases and Phase Equilibria in the Ternary Fe–Al–Nb System. 5th Discussion Meeting on the Development of Innovative Iron Aluminium Alloys, Prague, Czech Republic (2009)
He, C.; Stein, F.; Palm, M.: Thermodynamic Assessment of the Nb–Co and Nb–Co–Al System. 2nd Sino-German Symposium on Computational Thermodynamics and Kinetics and Their Applications to Solidification, Kornelimünster, Aachen, Germany (2009)
Stein, F.; Prymak, O.; Dovbenko, O. I.; He, C.; Palm, M.; Schuster, J. C.: Investigation of Phase Diagrams of Laves Phase Containing Binary and Ternary Nb–TM(–Al) Systems with TM=Cr,Fe,Co. 2nd Sino-German Symposium on Computational Thermodynamics and Kinetics and Their Applications to Solidification, Kornelimünster, Aachen, Germany (2009)
Vogel, S. C.; Eumann, M.; Palm, M.; Stein, F.: Investigation of the crystallographic structure of the ε phase in the Fe–Al system by high-temperature neutron diffraction. TMS 2009 Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, USA (2009)
Stein, F.: The Binary Fe–Al System. 5th Discussion Meeting on the Development of Innovative Iron Aluminium Alloys (FEAL 2009), Prague, Czech Republic (2009)
Kumar, K. S.; Stein, F.; Palm, M.: An in-situ electron microscopy study of microstructural evolution in a Co–Co2Nb binary alloy. MRS Fall Meeting 2008, Boston, MA, USA (2008)
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.
Scientists of the Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung pioneer new machine learning model for corrosion-resistant alloy design. Their results are now published in the journal Science Advances
The development of pyiron started in 2011 in the CM department to foster the implementation, rapid prototyping and application of the highly advanced fully ab initio simulation techniques developed by the department. The pyiron platform bundles the different steps occurring in a typical simulation life cycle in a single software platform and…
The project focuses on development and design of workflows, which enable advanced processing and analyses of various data obtained from different field ion emission microscope techniques such as field ion microscope (FIM), atom probe tomography (APT), electronic FIM (e-FIM) and time of flight enabled FIM (tof-FIM).
This project will aim at addressing the specific knowledge gap of experimental data on the mechanical behavior of microscale samples at ultra-short-time scales by the development of testing platforms capable of conducting quantitative micromechanical testing under extreme strain rates upto 10000/s and beyond.
The prediction of materials properties with ab initio based methods is a highly successful strategy in materials science. While the working horse density functional theory (DFT) was originally designed to describe the performance of materials in the ground state, the extension of these methods to finite temperatures has seen remarkable…
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.
This work led so far to several high impact publications: for the first time nanobeam diffraction (NBD) orientation mapping was used on atom probe tips, thereby enabling the high throughput characterization of grain boundary segregation as well as the crystallographic identification of phases.