Dagmar Hülsenberg

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Dagmar Hülsenberg, 2019

Dagmar Hülsenberg (born December 2, 1940 in Sonneberg ) is a German materials scientist and university professor .

Life

She was born as Dagmar Hinz in Thuringia , her father Erich Hinz was a commercial employee and died in the Second World War in 1943, her mother Margarete Hinz, nee. Tailor, learned the profession of plasterer and later worked as a saleswoman. After graduating from high school , she first completed an apprenticeship as a skilled worker for technical ceramics and then studied silicate metallurgy at the Freiberg Bergakademie from 1960 to 1965 . She obtained her diploma in 1965 with a subject on refractory ceramics from Professor Theodor Haase .

She then did two doctorates with magna cum laude - in business administration (Dr. rer. Oec.) After having passed the major rigorosum (supervising professor: Otto Gallenmüller ) and in silicate metallurgy (Dr.-Ing .; supervising university professor: Theodor Haase ). In 1970 she went to Berlin to the Ministry of Light Industry and in 1971 to the Ministry of Glass and Ceramics Industry . There she was involved in drawing up the science and technology plan for these ministries.

In 1975 Dagmar Hülsenberg moved to the Technical University of Ilmenau and at the age of 34 became the youngest professor in the GDR at the new chair for "Glass and Ceramic Materials and Technology". She held this professorship for a total of 32 years until March 2007.

From 1984 to 1990 Dagmar Hülsenberg was a member of the GDR Research Council . In 1989 she became a corresponding member of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR . Since 1986 she has been a member of the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig (SAW) , from 2004 to 2011 as a member of the Presidium.

Between 1976 and 1987 Hülsenberg was chairman of the Association of Silicate Technology in the Chamber of Technology. After the death of then President Manfred Schubert , from 1987 to 1992 she was the penultimate President of the Chamber of Technology (KDT), the GDR's 300,000-member engineering association. From 1992 until its dissolution, she was followed by Peter-Klaus Budig as President of the “Ingenieurtechnischer Verband KDT e. V. ".

Dagmar Hülsenberg has been a member of the Humboldt Society for Science, Art and Education since 2000 . V. . She has been a member of their Academic Council since 2002. She coordinated it from 2007 to 2018 and was also a member of the Presidium during this time. She edited 21 volumes of the treatises of the Humboldt Society. In 2019 she became an honorary member of the Humboldt Society for Science, Art and Education. V. awarded.

In the more than 30 years as a university lecturer, she has supervised around 200 diploma students and 42 doctoral and post-doctoral students, including 12 women, for whose support she was particularly committed.

Her extensive research dealt with the shaping of glass as well as measurement and automation technology in the glass industry, for which the technical profile of the TH Ilmenau provided good prerequisites. These included sensor-guided systems for scaling glass measuring and volumetric pipettes, for adjusting thermometers, for manufacturing brake lamps and for plastering breakthrough porcelain. After German reunification in 1990, as a result of the break-away of the regional glass and ceramics industry and the increased focus of the university, which has now become the Technical University of Ilmenau, among other things, micro- and nanotechnology , the micro-structuring of glasses became the main field of research for the now C4 professor . The production of monocrystalline oxidic micro and nano powders, oxidic glass composites and the electromagnetic influence on glass melts played just as important roles.

Hülsenberg has published her scientific results in around 200 publications , including several special specialist books, and she has also presented the results in numerous lectures at home and abroad.

After finishing his official career, Hülsenberg devoted himself to the previously largely untapped work of Alexander von Humboldt in the fields of earthenware, porcelain and glass. The series “Contributions to Alexander von Humboldt Research”, published by the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities , produced a total of three volumes and a fourth Humboldt book as part of the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig.

During this time she also published two books on microstructuring of glass and on ceramics for technical applications at Springer-Verlag and worked on the keywords on glass and ceramics in the online chemistry lexicon RÖMPP.

She is a member of the German Ceramic Society , the German Glass Technology Society and the German Academy of Science and Engineering (acatech) .

Publications (selection)

  • Determination of an optimal number of cost centers and cost units with special consideration of error aggregation. German publishing house for basic industry, Leipzig 1972.
  • Relationships between the structure and the high temperature deformation behavior of fireclay model offsets. German publishing house for basic industry, Leipzig 1972.
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Frieder Hülsenberg: Economic comparison on the question of further processing of defective products (semi-finished products) and good production, illustrated using the example of fine ceramics. German publishing house for basic industry, Leipzig 1973.
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Frieder Hülsenberg: Determination and informative value of the parameter "production capacity", shown using the example of a shaft hoisting system. German publishing house for basic industry, Leipzig 1974.
  • Vitroceramic as a material in electrical engineering, electronics. Lecture to the materials research class at the Academy of Sciences of the GDR on September 11, 1980. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1981.
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Horst-Günter Krüger, Wolfgang Steiner: Ceramic shaping. Deutscher Verlag für Grundstofftindustrie, Leipzig 1987, ISBN 978-3-342-00267-3 , reprinted by Springer Verlag, Berlin; Heidelberg; New York; London; Paris; Tokyo 1989, ISBN 978-3-540-19076-9 .
  • New glass and ceramic materials - materials of the future. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1989, ISBN 978-3-05-500562-6 .
  • Glass in microtechnology. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1992, ISBN 978-3-05-501516-8 .
  • Electrotechnological processes for glass and ceramics. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1992, ISBN 978-3-05-501623-3 .
  • Glass technologies for recycling tasks. Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig. Hirzel Verlag, Stuttgart; Leipzig 1998, ISBN 978-3-7776-0835-8 .
  • Homogenization of glass melts using Lorentz forces. Hirzel Verlag, Stuttgart; Leipzig 2005, ISBN 978-3-7776-1412-0 .
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Alf Harnisch, Alexander Bismarck: Microstructuring of glasses. Springer, Berlin; Heidelberg; New York 2008, ISBN 978-3-540-26245-9 .
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Ingo Schwarz (ed.): Alexander von Humboldt . Expert opinion on earthenware production in Rheinsberg 1792. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-05-005760-6 .
  • Ceramic - how an old material becomes ultra-modern. From the series: Technology in focus - data, facts, background. Springer Vieweg 2014, ISBN 978-3-642-53882-7 or DOI 10.1007 / 978-3-642-53883-4.
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Ingo Schwarz (ed.): Alexander von Humboldt . Expert opinions and letters on porcelain production 1792 - 1795. With a study by Dagmar Hülsenberg. De Gruyter Academic Research, Berlin 2014, ISBN 978-3-05-006386-7 .
  • Dagmar Hülsenberg, Ingo Schwarz (ed.): Alexander von Humboldt . Expert opinion and correspondence on glass production 1792 - 1797. With a study by Dagmar Hülsenberg. De Gruyter Academic Research, Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-11-051668-5 .
  • Alexander von Humboldt's reflections on special glass products. Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig - Commissioned by S. Hirzel, Stuttgart; Leipzig 2018, ISBN 978-3-7776-2746-5 .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dagmar Hülsenberg: Determination of an optimal number of cost centers and cost units - with special consideration of the error aggregation. Dissertation, Bergakademie Freiberg, Faculty of Social Sciences, Freiberg 1969.
  2. Dagmar Hülsenberg: High temperature deformation of heterogeneous materials - shown on the refractory material chamotte. Dissertation, Bergakademie Freiberg, Faculty of Technical Sciences, Freiberg 1970.
  3. Alumni TU Bergakademie Freiberg, accessed on March 3, 2015 ( Memento from April 2, 2015 in the Internet Archive )