Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7969388 | Materials Characterization | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The Fe-13.51Mn-4.82Si-8.32Cr-3.49Ni-0.15C shape memory alloy was subjected to severe plastic deformation by high-ratio differential speed rolling and subsequent annealing (between 873 and 1373 K) to find the factors that affect recovery stress and recovery strain. As the annealing temperature increased (i. e., as grain size increased), the recovery strain increased. This was attributed to decrease in the density of grain boundaries and the density of twins with increasing grain size. The recovery stress, however, showed a different behavior. It increased with annealing temperature up to 973 K, at which an ultrafine grain size near 1.6 μm was obtained, and then decreased with further increase in the temperature. The difference between the recovery strain and the plastic strain induced by recovery stress under constrained displacement during cooling was proposed to determine the amount of recovery stress. There was an optimum grain size for the largest difference between the recovery strain and the plastic strain. The current study shows that grain-size reduction is not good for having a high recovery strain but it is beneficial for having a high recovery stress in the Fe-Mn-Si shape memory alloys.
Related Topics
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Materials Science (General)
Authors
Y.S. Kim, E. Choi, W.J. Kim,