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Materials Science
Hungary
2026

D-Index & Metrics

Materials Science

D-Index
76
Citations
22568
World Ranking
3258
National Ranking
3

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2026 - Research.com Materials Science in Hungary Leader Award
  • 2025 - Research.com Materials Science in Hungary Leader Award
  • 2023 - Research.com Materials Science in Hungary Leader Award
  • 2022 - Research.com Materials Science in Hungary Leader Award

Overview

Tamás Ungár is a researcher affiliated with Eötvös Loránd University in Hungary. Their primary areas of study lie within Materials Science and Engineering, where they have contributed extensively to subfields such as Materials Chemistry, Mechanical Engineering, Aerospace Engineering, Mechanics of Materials, and Ecological Modeling.

Ungár's research focuses on several main topics, notably:

  • Microstructure and mechanical properties
  • Nuclear Materials and Properties
  • Fusion materials and technologies
  • High Entropy Alloys Studies
  • High-Temperature Coating Behaviors
  • Metal and Thin Film Mechanics
  • Additive Manufacturing Materials and Processes

The researcher has published numerous papers across various scientific venues. Their recent papers include:

  • Strength can be controlled by edge dislocations in refractory high-entropy alloys, 2021, Nature Communications
  • Enhancing fatigue life by ductile-transformable multicomponent B2 precipitates in a high-entropy alloy, 2021, Nature Communications
  • The Convolutional Multiple Whole Profile (CMWP) Fitting Method, a Global Optimization Procedure for Microstructure Determination, 2020, Crystals
  • Microstructure, Texture, and Strength Development during High-Pressure Torsion of CrMnFeCoNi High-Entropy Alloy, 2020, Crystals
  • Depth-profiling of residual stress and microstructure for austenitic stainless steel surface treated by cavitation, shot and laser peening, 2021, Materials Science and Engineering A

Ungár has collaborated frequently with several coauthors throughout their career. These frequent collaborators include:

  • Gábor Ribárik
  • Philipp Frankel
  • Michael Preuß
  • Rhys Thomas
  • Bertalan Jóni

The researcher's work has been published repeatedly in the following venues, reflecting patterns in their contributions:

  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Crystals
  • Journal of Nuclear Materials
  • Acta Materialia
  • Nature Communications

Tamás Ungár's body of research includes 52 publications in Materials Science and 46 in Engineering. Their academic output also highlights significant contributions to Materials Chemistry (49 publications) and Mechanical Engineering (24 publications), demonstrating a diverse scope within their disciplinary fields.

Best Publications

  • The effect of dislocation contrast on x‐ray line broadening: A new approach to line profile analysis

    T. Ungár;A. Borbély

  • The contrast factors of dislocations in cubic crystals: the dislocation model of strain anisotropy in practice

    T. Ungár;I. Dragomir;Á. Révész;A. Borbély

  • Microstructural parameters from X-ray diffraction peak broadening

    T Ungár

  • Crystallite size distribution and dislocation structure determined by diffraction profile analysis: principles and practical application to cubic and hexagonal crystals

    Tamás Ungár;Jenő Gubicza;Gábor Ribárik;A. Borbély

  • Dislocations, grain size and planar faults in nanostructured copper determined by high resolution X-ray diffraction and a new procedure of peak profile analysis

    T Ungár;S Ott;P.G Sanders;A Borbély

  • MWP-fit: a program for multiple whole-profile fitting of diffraction peak profiles by ab initio theoretical functions

    Gábor Ribárik;Tamás Ungár;Jenő Gubicza

  • Correlation between strength and microstructure of ball-milled Al–Mg alloys determined by X-ray diffraction

    Gábor Ribárik;Jenő Gubicza;Tamás Ungár

  • The Effect of Dislocation Contrast on X-Ray Line Profiles in Untextured Polycrystals

    T. Ungár;G. Tichy

  • Dislocation densities, arrangements and character from X-ray diffraction experiments

    T Ungár

  • X-ray line-broadening study of the dislocation cell structure in deformed [001]-orientated copper single crystals

    T. Ungar;H. Mughrabi;D. Rönnpagel;M. Wilkens

  • Long-range internal stresses and asymmetric X-ray line-broadening in tensile-deformed [001]-orientated copper single crystals

    H. Mughrabi;T. Ungár;W. Kienle;M. Wilkens

  • Nanostructures in Ti processed by severe plastic deformation

    Y. T. Zhu;J. Y. Huang;Jenő Gubicza;Tamás Ungár

  • Influence of stacking-fault energy on microstructural characteristics of ultrafine-grain copper and copper-zinc alloys

    Levente Balogh;Tamás Ungár;Yonghao Zhao;Y.T. Zhu

  • Stacking faults and twin boundaries in fcc crystals determined by x-ray diffraction profile analysis

    Levente Balogh;Gábor Ribárik;Tamás Ungár

  • Computer program ANIZC for the calculation of diffraction contrast factors of dislocations in elastically anisotropic cubic, hexagonal and trigonal crystals

    András Borbély;Juliana Dragomir-Cernatescu;Gábor Ribárik;Tamás Ungár

  • Correlation between subgrains and coherently scattering domains

    Tamás Ungár;Géza Tichy;Jenő Gubicza;R. J. Hellmig

  • Microstructure of carbon blacks determined by X-ray diffraction profile analysis

    Tamás Ungár;Jenő Gubicza;Gábor Ribárik;Cristian Pantea

  • An X-ray study of creep-deformation induced changes of the lattice mismatch in the γ′-hardened monocrystalline nickel-base superalloy SRR 99

    H.-A. Kuhn;H. Biermann;T. Ungár;H. Mughrabi

  • Dislocations and grain size in ball-milled iron powder

    Á. Révész;T. Ungár;A. Borbély;J. Lendvai

  • Contrast factors of dislocations in the hexagonal crystal system

    I. C. Dragomir;T. Ungár

  • The evolution of non-basal dislocations as a function of deformation temperature in pure magnesium determined by X-ray diffraction

    K. Máthis;K. Máthis;K. Nyilas;A. Axt;I. Dragomir-Cernatescu

  • Materials Science and Engineering A

    Gábor Csiszár;Amit Misra;Tamás Ungár

Frequent Co-Authors

Jenő Gubicza
Jenő Gubicza Eötvös Loránd University
Michael J. Zehetbauer
Michael J. Zehetbauer University of Vienna
Haël Mughrabi
Haël Mughrabi University of Stuttgart
Patrick Cordier
Patrick Cordier Institut Universitaire de France
Terence G. Langdon
Terence G. Langdon University of Southern California
Gavin Vaughan
Gavin Vaughan European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
Ruslan Z. Valiev
Ruslan Z. Valiev Ufa State Aviation Technical University
Peter K. Liaw
Peter K. Liaw University of Tennessee at Knoxville
Yuntian Zhu
Yuntian Zhu City University of Hong Kong
Hans Jørgen Roven
Hans Jørgen Roven Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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