Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
793170 | Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids | 2013 | 29 Pages |
We draw upon existing knowledge of twinning and slip mechanics to develop a diffraction analysis model that allows for empirical quantification of individual deformation mechanisms to the macroscopic behaviors of low symmetry and phase transforming crystalline solids. These methods are applied in studying elasticity, accommodation twinning, deformation twinning, and slip through neutron diffraction data of tensile and compressive deformations of monoclinic NiTi to ~18% true strain. A deeper understanding of tension–compression asymmetry in NiTi is gained by connecting crystallographic calculations of polycrystalline twinning strains with in situ diffraction measurements. Our analyses culminate in empirical, micromechanical quantification of individual elastic, accommodation twinning, deformation twinning, and slip contributions to the total macroscopic stress–strain response of a monoclinic material subjected to large deformations. From these results, we find that 20–40% of the total plastic response at high strains is due to deformation twinning and 60–80% due to slip.