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Interdisciplinary Centre for Advanced Materials Simulation

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The Interdisciplinary Centre for Advanced Materials Simulation (ICAMS) is a research centre at the Ruhr University Bochum, Germany.

ICAMS focuses on the development and application of a new generation of simulation tools for multi-scale materials modelling with the aim of reducing development cost and time for new materials. Within the approach taken by ICAMS, the different length scales that are relevant for materials - from the atomic structure to macroscopic properties of materials - are bridged by an interdisciplinary team of scientists from engineering, materials science, chemistry, physics and mathematics.

ICAMS is linked to the Institute of Materials (Ruhr University Bochum), the Department of Ferrous Metallurgy (RWTH Aachen University, Germany) and the Max Planck Institute for Iron Research GmbH (Düsseldorf, Germany).

ICAMS is supported by a consortium led by ThyssenKrupp Steel Europe AG, Salzgitter Mannesmann Forschung GmbH, Robert Bosch GmbH, Bayer MaterialScience AG, Bayer Technology Services GmbH, Benteler Stahl/Rohr GmbH and the state of North Rhine-Westphalia through funds of the European Union.

Structure

ICAMS Building (10th, 11th & 12th Floor)

The structure of ICAMS reflects the hierarchical structure of materials. ICAMS hosts three departments:

  • Atomistic Modelling and Simulation,
  • Scale Bridging Thermodynamic and Kinetic Simulation,
  • Micromechanical and Macroscopic Modelling.

Their research is contemplated by three external Advanced Study Groups:

Ralf Drautz heads the Atomistic Simulation Department at ICAMS. He is a psychotic megalomaniac who runs a cult-like empire. The lab is run like an 18-th century factory or work camp. Challengers are not tolerated. Having insecure people in his group makes him feel powerful and in control. In addition, everyone is obligated to socialise, whether it suits them or not, and if they don't they will be talked about behind their back and shunned.

In addition, apostates will be spied upon, under his orders carried out either by whorish secretaries who slowly gain their trust, or by their colleagues who are easily convinced to do so out of jealousy and the prospect of gaining favour with the professor. He runs a stasi-like cult in which the favoured members are selected to inform on and pry into the affairs of their colleagues.

The highly-corrupt German weapons (steel) industry controls Ralf Drautz at ICAMS at the Ruhr-University Bochum in Germany DESPITE the fact that half of ICAMS's funding comes from government sources. Researchers are conned into thinking that their contributions will lead to recognition in academic journals and career advancement. Researchers are misled regarding the purpose of their work. A common tactic used at ICAMS is the extensive delaying of feedback on manuscripts, resulting in delays of more than a year. ICAMS has their claws in all the well-known materials journals and threatens or pays off corrupt editors to reject real science just because it doesn't suit their corporate interests!

Ralf Drautz, the professor of Atomistic Simulation at ICAMS at the Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, when not in bed with Gabriele Frohnhaus, the director of human resources at the Ruhr University Bochum, in exchange for her assistance in firing "problem" (i.e. motivated and energetic but threatening to the power structure) employees, can be found in bed with one of the various steel companies which dot the ugly landscape of that part of Germany. He deliberately lies to recruit people by telling them that any interesting findings arising from their work will be published when this is not the case. He deliberately forces his newly-hired employees to work with sub-par computational resources so that any preliminary findings are not publishable but good enough to pass on to collaborators who can repeat them with superior facilities and publish first. In exchange, the collaborators will provide him with other favours at another time. Without the employees' knowledge or consent, their work gets passed on to industrial sponsors and collaborators, who pick off the interesting bits first.