Publications by authors named "T KREMMER"

Potential applications of nanomaterials range from electronics to environmental technology, thus a better understanding of their manufacturing and manipulation is of paramount importance. The present study demonstrates a methodology for the use of metallic nanomaterials as reactants to examine nanoalloying within a transmission electron microscope. The method is further utilised as a starting point of a metallurgical toolbox, to study subsequent alloying of materials by using a nanoscale-sized chemical reactor for nanometallurgy.

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A nanocrystalline CrMnFeCoNi high-entropy alloy produced using severe plastic deformation using high-pressure torsion was annealed at selected temperatures and times (450 °C for 1 h and 15 h and at 600 °C for 1 h), causing a phase decomposition into a multi-phase structure. The samples were subsequently deformed again by high-pressure torsion to investigate the possibility of tailoring a favorable composite architecture by re-distributing, fragmenting, or partially dissolving the additional intermetallic phases. While the second phase in the 450 °C annealing states had high stability against mechanical mixing, a partial dissolution could be achieved in the samples subjected to 600 °C for 1 h.

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Article Synopsis
  • Characterizing Zr-containing dispersoids in aluminum alloys is tough due to their size variability and uneven distribution in the material.
  • This study compared small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) for analyzing these dispersoids in a specific type of aluminum alloy.
  • SAXS was found to be more sensitive to Zr dispersoids, while SANS can examine larger sample volumes; using both techniques together effectively distinguishes dispersoids from other phases, although SEM results diverged from others due to its resolution limits.
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A high-resolution HILIC-MS/MS method was developed to analyze anthranilic acid derivatives of -glycans released from human serum alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (AGP). The method was applied to samples obtained from 18 patients suffering from high-risk malignant melanoma as well as 19 healthy individuals. It enabled the identification of 102 glycan isomers separating isomers that differ only in sialic acid linkage (α-2,3, α-2,6) or in fucose positions (core, antenna).

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The increasing demands for Al sheets with superior mechanical properties and excellent formability require a profound knowledge of the microstructure and texture evolution in the course of their production. The present study gives a comprehensive overview on the primary- and secondary phase formation in AlMg(Mn) alloys with varying Fe and Mn additions, including variations in processing parameters such as solidification conditions, homogenization temperature, and degree of cold rolling. Higher Fe alloying levels increase the primary phase fraction and favor the needle-shaped morphology of the constituent phases.

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