J
John Banhart
Researcher at Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin
Publications - 462
Citations - 21750
John Banhart is an academic researcher from Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metal foam & Neutron imaging. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 451 publications receiving 19087 citations. Previous affiliations of John Banhart include Technical University of Berlin & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
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Manufacture, characterisation and application of cellular metals and metal foams
TL;DR: The possibilities for manufacturing metal foams or other porous metallic structures are reviewed in this article, where various manufacturing processes are classified according to the state of matter in which the metal is processed, such as solid, liquid, gaseous or ionised.
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Porous Metals and Metallic Foams: Current Status and Recent Developments†
TL;DR: Porous metals and metallic foams are presently the focus of very active research and development activities as discussed by the authors, with particular emphasis on research presented at the latest International Conference on Porous Metals and Metallic Foams (MetFoam 2007).
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Decomposition in multi-component AlCoCrCuFeNi high-entropy alloy
TL;DR: In this paper, the decomposition of an equiatomic AlCoCrCuFeNi high-entropy alloy produced by splat quenching and casting was investigated by the analytical high-resolution methods: transmission electron microscopy and three-dimensional atom probe.
BookDOI
Advanced tomographic methods in materials research and engineering
TL;DR: In this paper, the basic concepts for reconstruction of tomography are discussed, including phase contrast and Holographic Tomography with magnifying optics and three-dimensional X-ray Diffraction.
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Deformation characteristics of metal foams
John Banhart,Joachim Baumeister +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the deformation behavior of metal foams is investigated by uniaxial testing and a series of measurements were carried out where the orientation of the outer skin and the foaming direction were varied.