Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5455183 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2017 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
This study demonstrates a transition from a structure-dominated response to a microstructure-dominated response around machined features in a polycrystalline NiTi shape memory alloy (SMA), as the size of the features relative to the mean grain size is varied. The specific structural features considered are a pair of holes of varying separation and size in the 100-500 micrometer range. The local deformation around the holes is experimentally characterized during superelastic loading and compared with the predictions of a macro-scale phenomenological model for phase transformation. This comparison, coupled with a microstructural analysis reveals two key results. In the case when the holes are much larger than the grains, the local strain fields are predominantly determined by the stress concentrations around the structural features, and they are adequately predicted by the phenomenological model. However, when the holes and the grains are of comparable size, microstructural heterogeneity and fine-scale microstructural features such as precipitates determine the local superelastic response. The prediction of the macro-scale model in this case significantly deviates from the experimental observation. A key outcome of this work is a criterion in terms of the microstructure and the relative structural feature size in SMAs for determining the applicability of macro-scale models vs. micromechanical models of phase transformation for predicting the local deformation response.
Keywords
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Partha P. Paul, Harshad M. Paranjape, Behnam Amin-Ahmadi, Aaron P. Stebner, David C. Dunand, L. Catherine Brinson,