Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
784508 International Journal of Plasticity 2010 25 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this work we develop a finite-deformation-based, thermo-mechanically-coupled and non-local phenomenological theory for polycrystalline shape-memory alloys (SMAs) capable of undergoing austenite ↔↔ martensite phase transformations. The constitutive model is developed in the isotropic plasticity setting using standard balance laws, thermodynamic laws and the theory of micro-force balance (Fried and Gurtin, 1994). The constitutive model is then implemented in the ABAQUS/Explicit (2009) finite-element program by writing a user-material subroutine. Material parameters in the constitutive model were fitted to a set of superelastic experiments conducted by Thamburaja and Anand (2001) on a polycrystalline rod Ti–Ni. With the material parameters calibrated, we show that the experimental stress-biased strain–temperature-cycling and shape-memory effect responses are qualitatively well-reproduced by the constitutive model and the numerical simulations. We also show the capability of our constitutive mode in studying the response of SMAs undergoing coupled thermo-mechanical loading and also multi-axial loading conditions by studying the deformation behavior of a stent unit cell.Finally, with the aid of finite-element simulations we also show that our non-local constitutive theory is able to accurately determine the position and motion of austenite–martensite interfaces during phase transformations regardless of mesh density and without the aid of jump conditions.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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