Role of texture in tension-compression asymmetry in polycrystalline NiTi
The purpose of the present study is to thoroughly understand the stress-strain behavior of polycrystalline NiTi deformed under tension versus compression. To do this, a micromechanical model is used which incorporates single crystal constitutive relationships and experimentally measured polycrystalline texture into the self-consistent formulation. For the first time it is quantitatively demonstrated that texture measurements coupled with a micromechanical model can accurately predict tension/compression asymmetry in NiTi shape memory alloys. The predicted critical transformation stress levels and transformation stress-strain slopes under both tensile and compressive loading are consistent with experimental results. For textured polycrystalline NiTi deformed under tension it is demonstrated that the martensite evolution is very abrupt, consistent with the Luders type deformation experimentally observed. The abrupt transformation under tension is attributed to the fact that the majority of the grains are oriented along the [111] crystallographic direction, which is soft under tensile loading. Since single crystals of the [111] orientation are hard under compression it is also demonstrated that under compression the martensite in textured polycrystalline NiTi evolves relatively slower.
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- Mechanical Engineering & Transports
- 4017 Mechanical engineering
- 4016 Materials engineering
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 0913 Mechanical Engineering
- 0912 Materials Engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Mechanical Engineering & Transports
- 4017 Mechanical engineering
- 4016 Materials engineering
- 4005 Civil engineering
- 0913 Mechanical Engineering
- 0912 Materials Engineering
- 0905 Civil Engineering