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Eiber, Mathias; Faber, Daniela; Bergmann, Jean Pierre
Blockchain als Datenscheibe für kooperative Wertschöpfung. - In: Ingenieur-Spiegel, ISSN 1868-5919, (2019), 3, S. 66-67

Köhler, Tobias; Grätzel, Michael; Kleinherz, Ludwig; Bergmann, Jean Pierre
Gewichtsreduzierung beim Bordnetz: die richtige Mischung macht's. - In: Bordnetz, (2019), S. 14-19

Gizatullin, Bulat; Gafurov, Marat; Vakhin, Alexey; Rodionov, Alexander; Mamin, Georgy; Orlinskii, Sergei; Mattea, Carlos; Stapf, Siegfried
Native vanadyl complexes in crude oil as polarizing agents for in situ proton dynamic nuclear polarization. - In: Energy & fuels, ISSN 1520-5029, Bd. 33 (2019), 11, S. 10923-10932

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.energyfuels.9b03049
Ryu, Jinhyeok; Gwak, Sunjae; Kim, Jaewon; Yu, Hyeon-Hye; Kim, Ji-Hwan; Lee, Ji-Won; Yi, Chang-Hwan; Kim, Chil-Min
Hybridization of different types of exceptional points. - In: Photonics research, ISSN 2327-9125, Bd. 7 (2019), 12, S. 1473-1478

https://doi.org/10.1364/PRJ.7.001473
Gizatullin, Bulat; Mattea, Carlos; Stapf, Siegfried
Hyperpolarization by DNP and molecular dynamics: eliminating the radical contribution in NMR relaxation studies. - In: The journal of physical chemistry, ISSN 1520-5207, Bd. 123 (2019), 46, S. 9963-9970

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b03246
Herrfurth, Oliver; Pflug, Theo; Olbrich, Markus; Grundmann, Marius; Horn, Alexander; Schmidt-Grund, Rüdiger
Femtosecond-time-resolved imaging of the dielectric function of ZnO in the visible to near-IR spectral range. - In: Applied physics letters, ISSN 1077-3118, Bd. 115 (2019), 21, S. 212103-1-212103-5

https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5128069
Reiprich, Johannes; Isaac, Nishchay Angel; Schlag, Leslie; Hopfeld, Marcus; Ecke, Gernot; Stauden, Thomas; Pezoldt, Jörg; Jacobs, Heiko O.
Corona discharge assisted growth morphology switching of tin-doped gallium oxide for optical gas sensing applications. - In: Crystal growth & design, ISSN 1528-7505, Bd. 19 (2019), 12, S. 6945-6953

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.9b00678
Gast, Richard; Rose, Daniel; Salomon, Christoph; Möller, Harald E.; Weiskopf, Nikolaus; Knösche, Thomas R.
PyRates - a Python framework for rate-based neural simulations. - In: PLOS ONE, ISSN 1932-6203, Bd. 14 (2019), 12, e0225900, insges. 26 S.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225900
Chehreh, Abootorab; Grätzel, Michael; Klein, Martin; Bergmann, Jean Pierre; Walther, Frank
Fatigue behavior of friction stir welded EN AW 5754 aluminum alloy using load increase procedure. - In: World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology, Bd. 13 (2019), 2, S. 108-113

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2571954
Brauer, Hartmut; Ziolkowski, Marek
Motion-induced eddy current testing. - In: Handbook of advanced nondestructive evaluation, (2019), S. 781-825

Nondestructive material testing and evaluation is a vast interdisciplinary field as well as a challenge due to the variety of applications. Whereas the focus of nondestructive testing is to identify anomalies within a specimen, the reconstruction of defect properties and their influence on the materials usability is the focus of nondestructive evaluation. In this chapter the technology of motion-induced eddy current testing (MIECT) is introduced. In contrast to traditional eddy current testing (ECT) methods, MIECT makes use of relative motion between the object under test and permanent magnets. The induced eddy currents interact with the applied magnetic field and result in a Lorentz force, depending on the impressed magnetic induction, the electrical conductivity, and the measuring velocity. Because permanent magnets produce considerably stronger magnetic fields than current-carrying ECT coils, even deep internal defects can be detected using the Lorentz force eddy current testing (LET). It is shown how the electromagnetic fields can be described theoretically and simulated numerically, as well as how imperfections/defects in non-ferromagnetic, conducting specimens can be detected using an appropriate laboratory environment. Comparative studies have shown that LET applied to metallic composite material or friction stir welds is a promising and competitive alternative to traditional ECT methods enabling the contactless evaluation of moving electrical conductors.



https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-26553-7_25